In the years following After Virtue , MacIntyre’s project evolved into a sophisticated defense of tradition-constituted inquiry. In Whose Justice? Which Rationality? (1988) and Three Rival Versions of Moral Enquiry (1990), he argued that there is no such thing as "rationality as such." Instead, there are only rationalities embedded within specific historical traditions, such as the Aristotelian, the Augustinian, or the Enlightenment tradition. MacIntyre argued that traditions can rationally evaluate one another by their ability to solve their own internal crises and accommodate the insights of rival traditions. It was during this period that MacIntyre fully embraced the philosophy of Thomas Aquinas, finding in Thomism the most complete synthesis of Aristotelian metaphysics and Christian theology.
MacIntyre’s later work continued to refine his critique of modernity and his defense of communal forms of life. In Dependent Rational Animals (1999), he expanded his Aristotelian framework to account for human vulnerability and disability. He argued that human beings are not self-sufficient individuals but are fundamentally dependent on others. Therefore, a central part of moral life involves acknowledging our dependencies and participating in networks of giving and receiving. This work further solidified his critique of the capitalist nation-state, which he viewed as inherently hostile to the small-scale, local communities where genuine moral education and the common good can be realized. Alasdair MacIntyre: An Intellectual Biography (...
Alasdair MacIntyre’s intellectual biography is the story of a thinker who swam against the tide of his age. Moving from Marxism to Thomism, he consistently challenged the foundational assumptions of modern liberal society. His revitalization of virtue ethics fundamentally altered the landscape of moral philosophy, forcing contemporary thinkers to reckon with the historical and social dimensions of moral reasoning. Whether one accepts or rejects his sweeping critique of modernity, MacIntyre remains an indispensable voice in contemporary philosophy, reminding us that to understand who we ought to be, we must first understand the story of which we find ourselves a part. In the years following After Virtue , MacIntyre’s