Virtue Ethics: Dewey and MacIntyre
By (Author) Stephen Carden
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Continuum International Publishing Group Ltd.
12th March 2006
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
179.9
Hardback
158
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
380g
Modern ethical theory has experienced a resurgence of interest in the virtues. Long relegated to the ancient and medieval past, virtue theory is now considered by many to be a viable alternative to the otherwise dominant Kantian and Utilitarian ethical theories. Alasdair MacIntyre is a central figure in this movement, whose work forms an expanding yet consistent and influential project to address fundamental issues in ethical theory and American culture. However, many of his ideas were anticipated by John Dewey, who also has a great deal to say about the virtues in a moral life.This book offers, as it were, a critique of MacIntyre by Dewey that allows these two philosophers to converse about the nature and origins of the virtues and their importance for living a good life. Stephen Carden argues that Dewey has the more comprehensive view of the virtues and that a close comparison of their ideas reveals several significant weaknesses in MacIntyre's position.
Reference & Research Book News, August 2006 -- mention
"Carden's book is a welcome addition to the discipline of ethics, contributing to the growing scholarship on Dewey's moral theory. It bring Dewey into conversation with virtue ethics and the work of Alasdair MacIntyre...Carden's project is tremendously fecund and will hopefully open up further avenues of research into these two figures." -Alain Beauclair, Philosophy in Review
"This is philosophical thinking at its most relevant and best, grounded in responsible scholarship of the first order." John Lachs, Professor of Philosophy at Vanderbilt University * Blurb from reviewer *
Stephen D. Carden teaches philosophy and English at Owensboro Community and Technical College, Kentucky.