
released 5/30/2025
In this 2007 essay, Stanley Hauerwas explains the breadth and depth of Alasdair MacIntyre’s thought, the goal of which was to help people to act intelligibly and live morally worthy lives. MacIntyre (1929–2025), a self-proclaimed “metaphysical realist,” examined from many angles those aspects of modernity that distort or obscure practical reason and narrative coherence, leading most of us to “live lives we do not understand.” Hauerwas shows the influence of Marx, Aristotle, Aquinas, and others in shaping MacIntyre’s contention that the best human life is one lived in community with shared common goods, providing fertile ground for the growth of virtue. MacIntyre critiqued liberalism and capitalism as being antithetical to the tradition of the virtues. Hauerwas discusses several criticisms of MacIntyre, showing that some of them are based on misunderstandings, while others have a bit more standing. Through it all, though, he believes that the philosopher’s thought was rigorous, consistent, and capacious, making him one of the most important philosophers of our time.
This essay is provided courtesy of First Things. It was originally published in the October 2007 issue of the magazine, and is read by Ken Myers. Click here to read the article on the First Things website.
40 minutes
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