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Practice, reason, and the good: human nature and MacIntyrean business ethics

Practice, reason, and the good: human nature and MacIntyrean business ethics
Practice, reason, and the good: human nature and MacIntyrean business ethics
MacIntyrean business ethics research has focused on the concept of a practice, drawn primarily from After Virtue. MacIntyre later emphasized the need to adopt an account of human nature to provide a better grounding for his earlier social teleology. We consider three implications of incorporating the neo-Aristotelian and Thomistic account of human nature outlined in MacIntyre’s later works for MacIntyrean business ethics research: First, this account enables the MacIntyrean perspective to better ground its focus on practices as a key moral requirement for the organization of work. Second, it provides a better basis for distinguishing productive practices in good order from other business activities lacking the characteristics of a practice. Third, a theory incorporating an account of human nature, particularly MacIntyre’s notion of natural law, is better able to address broader questions in business ethics that are not directly concerned with the structure of work.
Neo-Aristotelianism, virtue ethics, human nature, MacIntyre
1052-150X
Bernacchio, Caleb
7e9e2924-e7fc-4da0-98dd-70c36ca3df04
Sinnicks, Matthew
63b27aef-8672-4fa7-b2fa-388c9af51c57
Bernacchio, Caleb
7e9e2924-e7fc-4da0-98dd-70c36ca3df04
Sinnicks, Matthew
63b27aef-8672-4fa7-b2fa-388c9af51c57

Bernacchio, Caleb and Sinnicks, Matthew (2025) Practice, reason, and the good: human nature and MacIntyrean business ethics. Business Ethics Quarterly. (In Press)

Record type: Article

Abstract

MacIntyrean business ethics research has focused on the concept of a practice, drawn primarily from After Virtue. MacIntyre later emphasized the need to adopt an account of human nature to provide a better grounding for his earlier social teleology. We consider three implications of incorporating the neo-Aristotelian and Thomistic account of human nature outlined in MacIntyre’s later works for MacIntyrean business ethics research: First, this account enables the MacIntyrean perspective to better ground its focus on practices as a key moral requirement for the organization of work. Second, it provides a better basis for distinguishing productive practices in good order from other business activities lacking the characteristics of a practice. Third, a theory incorporating an account of human nature, particularly MacIntyre’s notion of natural law, is better able to address broader questions in business ethics that are not directly concerned with the structure of work.

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Bernacchio & Sinnicks - Practice, Reason, and the Good (BEQ) - Accepted Manuscript
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 18 July 2025
Keywords: Neo-Aristotelianism, virtue ethics, human nature, MacIntyre

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 504424
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/504424
ISSN: 1052-150X
PURE UUID: 51984526-3ce1-4581-9d3a-b11b4435801f
ORCID for Matthew Sinnicks: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2588-5821

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Date deposited: 09 Sep 2025 17:05
Last modified: 11 Sep 2025 03:28

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Contributors

Author: Caleb Bernacchio
Author: Matthew Sinnicks ORCID iD

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