Deals and Ideals: Two Concepts of Enlightenment
Alasdair MacIntyre writes of this book: "In his excellent earlier book, Marx: Justice and Dialectic, James Daly identified Marx's place in, and extraordinary contribution to, the moral debates of the modern era. Now he has put us even further in his debt not only by relating Marx to his Aristotelian predecessors and to the natural law tradition, but also by using this understanding of Marx to throw fresh light on the moral antagonism between Marx and individualist conceptions of human nature. This is a splendid sequel to his earlier work."
160 pages
ISBN: 1-871551-31-5
Alasdair MacIntyre writes of this book: "In his excellent earlier book, Marx: Justice and Dialectic, James Daly identified Marx's place in, and extraordinary contribution to, the moral debates of the modern era. Now he has put us even further in his debt not only by relating Marx to his Aristotelian predecessors and to the natural law tradition, but also by using this understanding of Marx to throw fresh light on the moral antagonism between Marx and individualist conceptions of human nature. This is a splendid sequel to his earlier work."
160 pages
ISBN: 1-871551-31-5
Alasdair MacIntyre writes of this book: "In his excellent earlier book, Marx: Justice and Dialectic, James Daly identified Marx's place in, and extraordinary contribution to, the moral debates of the modern era. Now he has put us even further in his debt not only by relating Marx to his Aristotelian predecessors and to the natural law tradition, but also by using this understanding of Marx to throw fresh light on the moral antagonism between Marx and individualist conceptions of human nature. This is a splendid sequel to his earlier work."
160 pages
ISBN: 1-871551-31-5