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Full Description
Hegel and MacIntyre: Reason in History brings the work of foremost Anglophone moral philosopher Alasdair MacIntyre into dialogue with G. W. F. Hegel—two rationalist historicists whose affinities and tensions have often been noted, yet never before explored at book-length. The contributions in this collection, by leading Hegel and MacIntyre scholars and critical theorists, examine a wide range of questions about moral life under conditions of late-capitalist modernity.
Part I addresses (meta)ethical questions about the foundations of normativity, the scope of justice, the metaphysics of the self, and how ethical concepts acquire determinacy. Part II addresses questions about the politics of small communities, democratic life-forms, and the tensions between modern institutions and virtue-enabling social practices. Part III traces MacIntyre's engagement with Hegel (and Marx) historically, from his British New Left beginning to his final writings.
Together, these articles show how philosophy can orient us in the conflicts of modernity. The book will be of interest not only to scholars of MacIntyre and Hegel, but also to all who work in modern moral, social, and political thought, especially Marxism, neo-Aristotelianism, and Thomism.
Contents
Introduction. Section One 1. Self-Knowledge and Human Life 2. Between Sartre and Goffman: Alasdair MacIntyre and Hegel's Theory of the Self 3. After Determinate Content: Reading MacIntyre as an Inferentialist Section Two 4. Found or sought? Hegel vs MacIntyre on the Good Life and the Virtues 5. Saving the Enlightenment from Itself: Hegel versus MacIntyre on Teleology and Right 6. Thomistic Aristotelians on the Sociality of Reason 7. Deweyan Democracy as a Way of Life: Pragmatist possibilities for MacIntyre Section Three 8. Freedom and Rational Agency in the Young MacIntyre 9. Alasdair MacIntyre: Under the Shadow of Hegel 10. From Freedom to Final End: MacIntyre's Hegelian Aristotle



