Solidarity or Virtuousness Rorty Versus Macintyre

  • Hans Boutellier
Chapter

Abstract

The nineteenth century witnessed a change in how people think about morality. Rather than moral consensus, moral disparity became the focal point for reflection. Moral philosophers hitherto had no problem formulating actual moral judgements and treatises on required virtues. The controversies largely pertained to the issues moral judgements are based upon, but there was no questioning that they are unequivocal, or ought to be (Baier, 1989, pp. 229 ff.). The point of departure for today’s philosophical reflection on morality is pluralism; ethics embodies the study of logical or semiotic properties of moral terms and procedures for attaining agreement. But morally speaking, philosophy continues to be preferably neutral, or better yet sceptical as regards moral judgements. Philosophers rarely make statements about “ordinary vices” or, in more policy-oriented terms, the question of criminality.1

Keywords

Moral Judgement Liberal Democracy Moral Subject Moral Faculty Moral Consensus 
These keywords were added by machine and not by the authors. This process is experimental and the keywords may be updated as the learning algorithm improves.

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References

  1. 1.
    The term ordinary vices was coined by Shklar (1984).Google Scholar
  2. 2.
    Ankersmit (1992) notes that in proportion to the size of his work, Rorty’s influence is immense, though Ankersmit did count 157 publications from 1949 to 1989.Google Scholar
  3. 3.
    Maclntyre categorically rejects the distinction between moral practice and moral theory; there are not two histories. Rorty similarly views philosophy that places itself outside the cultural discourse as categorically unfeasible. All he professes to do is philosophically put contemporary culture into words.Google Scholar
  4. 4.
    MacIntyre goes to a special effort in this connection to refute the work of G. E. Moore (Principia Ethica 1903), in whose view moral statements can solely be founded upon intuition. For the rest, a thinker like Spinoza already held that good and evil are no more than modalities of the imagination.Google Scholar
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    Bellah, Madsen et al. (1985, 1991) presents a comparable line of reasoning. A good society is not, as Locke thought, a by-product of autonomous individuals promoting their own interests, but the product of a morally inspired institutional life.Google Scholar
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  9. 9.
    A chess player strives for example to achieve a higher and higher level within the rules of the game. This is the kind of command that is inherent to the game, otherwise it loses its purpose. It is also possible however to want to earn money playing chess. Goods like these become individual property, but immanent goods are there for the entire community involved in the practice. Every serious chess player benefits from a new variation on a classic opening.Google Scholar
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  15. 15.
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    Rorty goes on from this observation to formulate an interesting conception of the task of the intellectual and its limitations: “Letting us see the narratives of our own lives as episodes within such larger historical narratives is, 1 think, as much as the intellectuals are able to do in aid of morality” (1986, p. 19).Google Scholar
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    Though this is suggested in Rawls’ main work, A Theory of Justice (1971). It is precisely on this point that an author like Sadurski (1991) criticizes Rawls’ work.Google Scholar
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    I elaborated upon this notion with respect to family therapy, which has the pretence of protecting the family but can be viewed de facto as its gravedigger (De Boer and Boutellier, 1982).Google Scholar
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    See e.g. Fraser (1988), Mouffe (1988), Ankersmit (1992), Bernstein (1991), Guignon and Hiley (1990) and Van Stokkom (1993) in this connection.Google Scholar

Copyright information

© Kluwer Academic Publishers 2000

Authors and Affiliations

  • Hans Boutellier
    • 1
    • 2
  1. 1.Ministry of JusticeThe HagueNetherlands
  2. 2.Vrije UniversiteitAmsterdamNetherlands

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