Socratic political philosophy and the problem of virtue
By: BARTLETT, Robert C.
Material type: ArticlePublisher: American Political Science Association, 2002American Political Science Review 96, 3, p. 525-533Abstract: Plato`s Meno deserves careful examination today because it highlights two facets of the concern for virtue neglected or obscured by the current revival of virtue among liberal theorists: the devotion to a good that cannot simply be reduced either to individual flourishing or to communal wellbeing - what Plato calls nobility or the noble; and the complex relation of virtue so understood to the concern for religion or piety. If the sought-for incorporation of virtue into liberal thought and practice today fails to grapple with these profound human concerns, in the first place by recognizing theirs existence, the language of virtue and its attendant moral sentiments will remain a matter more of scholarly debate than of lived practiceItem type | Current location | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Periódico | Biblioteca Graciliano Ramos | Periódico | Not for loan |
Plato`s Meno deserves careful examination today because it highlights two facets of the concern for virtue neglected or obscured by the current revival of virtue among liberal theorists: the devotion to a good that cannot simply be reduced either to individual flourishing or to communal wellbeing - what Plato calls nobility or the noble; and the complex relation of virtue so understood to the concern for religion or piety. If the sought-for incorporation of virtue into liberal thought and practice today fails to grapple with these profound human concerns, in the first place by recognizing theirs existence, the language of virtue and its attendant moral sentiments will remain a matter more of scholarly debate than of lived practice
There are no comments for this item.