Home > Lectures > Contemporary Communitarianism, part I

Contemporary Communitarianism, part I

By Ian Shapiro - Yale
get flash player

Lecture Description

In addition to the traditionalist-conservative view covered last time, the other anti-Enlightenment school the course explores is contemporary communitarianism. While Burke and Devlin appealed to tradition as the basis for our values, communitarians appeal to the community-accepted values as the basis for what should guide us. Communitarian Richard Rorty criticizes the Enlightenment endeavor of justifying philosophy from the ground up from indubitable premises as a fool's errand and a dangerous mug's game. The main focus of this lecture is the communitarianism of Alasdair MacIntyre. Professor Shapiro introduces this school by exploring the symptoms of the problem wrought by the Enlightenment. One is the rise of emotivism and complete moral subjectivism--that is, the abandonment of the instruments for making moral judgments as a consequence of trying to justify philosophy from the ground up. The second symptom is the triumph of instrumentalism and the rejection of teleology, which is actually a coping mechanism for society's deep pluralism of values. Professor Shapiro discusses MacIntyre's two symptoms, as well as introduces his conceptions of practices and virtues.

Course Description

Course Index

  1. Information and Housekeeping
  2. The Trial of Adolf Eichmann
  3. Natural Law Roots of the Social Contract Tradition
  4. Origins of Classical Utilitarianism
  5. Classical Utilitarianism and Distributive Justice
  6. From Classical to Neoclassical Utilitarianism
  7. The Neoclassical Synthesis of Rights and Utility
  8. Limits of the Neoclassical Synthesis
  9. The Marxian Challenge
  10. Marx's Theory of Capitalism
  11. Marxian Exploitation and Distributive Justice
  12. The Marxian Failure and Legacy
  13. Appropriating Locke Today
  14. Rights as Side Constraints and the Minimal State
  15. Compensation versus Redistribution
  16. The Rawlsian Social Contract
  17. Distributive Justice and the Welfare State
  18. The "Political-not-Metaphysical" Legacy
  19. The Burkean Outlook
  20. Contemporary Communitarianism, part I
  21. Contemporary Communitarianism, part II
  22. Democracy and Majority Rule, part I
  23. Democracy and Majority Rule, part II
  24. Democratic Justice: Theory
  25. Democratic Justice: Applications