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  1. Limits of the Story: Tragedy in Recent Virtue Ethics.Pamela M. Hall - 2004 - Studies in Christian Ethics 17 (3):1-10.
    I examine the role of tragedy within the ethics of Alasdair MacIntyre and Iris Murdoch. MacIntyre argues for a narrative conception of the self, stressing the need for coherence and intelligibility and for the virtues which promote them. Tragic dilemma presents a successful self with severe frustration but not with destruction of its overall project. Murdoch, on the other hand, holds little hope for the self's coherence, and in fact champions tragic art's capacity for disturbing and even disrupting the self's (...)
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  • Love and Attention.Janet Martin Soskice - 1992 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 32:59-72.
    The matched pair ‘love’ and ‘attention’ is familiar to most of us from the essays in Iris Murdoch's The Sovereignty of Good. Although she tells us in that book that there is, in her view, no God in the traditional sense of that term, she provides accounts of art, prayer and morality that are religious. ‘Morality’, she tells us, ‘has always been connected with religion and religion with mysticism’ . The connection here is love and attention: ‘Virtue is au fond (...)
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  • Spiritualized morality and traditional religion.Gordon Graham - 1996 - Ratio 9 (1):78-84.
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