Part I MacIntyre—Christianity and/or Marxism? 1 Christianity and Marxism: acceptance and Rejection 2 An excursus on the possibility of an Aristotelian Marxism Part II Markets, managers and the virtues 3 MacIntyre’s evaluative history and Polanyi’s historical sociology 4 The morality of markets and the ‘crisis of authority’: notes for a sociology in a world after virtue 5 Managerialism and the culture of bureaucratic individualism 6 Conclusion: narrative and communities
Peter McMylor
"A provocative "tour-de-force . . . he showed that MacIntyre's
early Christianity, his excursions into Marxism, his
neo-Aristotelianism, his Hegelianism and his later Thomism are all
parts of the same search for the virtuous community, for the
authenticity of theory related to practice."
-Ioan Davies, York University, Canada
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