Abstract

Alasdair MacIntyre, who does not see tradition as a dead concept, but evaluates it as an argument that has expanded historically and socially embodied in terms of methodology, asserts that the rational virtue tradition created by Aristotle, a figure that unites the predecessor and the successor of a very ancient tradition should be revived in order to overcome the moral and socio-political problems of the contemporary world. According to MacIntyre, the consistent and rational basis that moral philosophy has lost in the process of about three centuries due to liberal individualism can be restored by the Aristotelian tradition. This study deals with MacIntyre's analysis of the problems of modern moral philosophy, which interprets the tradition in question has an understanding of the teleological human nature and the essence that determines the real purpose of man.

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