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After Virtue [Book Review]

Teaching Philosophy 5 (3):245-246 (1982)

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  1. Re-enchanting the body: overcoming the melancholy of anatomy.Joel James Shuman - 2018 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 39 (6):473-481.
    I argue here that Weberian disenchantment is manifest in the triumph of instrumental reason and the expansion of analytic enquiry, which now dominates not simply those sciences upon which medicine depends, but medical practice itself. I suggest ways that analytic enquiry, also referred to here as anatomical reasoning, are part of a particular ideology—a way of seeing, speaking about, and inhabiting the world—that often fails to serve the health of patients because it is incapable of “seeing” them in the moral (...)
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  • Alasdair MacIntyre’s writings on medicine and medical ethics.Patricia Souza Valle Cardoso Pastura & Marcelo Gerardin Poirot Land - 2019 - Revista Bioética 27 (4).
    Alasdair MacIntyre is a contemporary philosopher of Ethics and Politics best known for his book “After virtue”, 1981. The originality and relevance of this work lie in the presentation of his articles from the 1970’s about medicine and medical ethics, which are unexplored in Bioethics. In these articles, MacIntyre criticizes changes in society transforming the physician-patient relationship: fragmentary moral views, individualism, misunderstanding of scientism and fallibility of the practice, as well as the lost background of common values and medical authority. (...)
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