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"Reclaiming Moral Agency provides a comprehensive analysis of the moral philosophy of Albert the Great (1200-1280) the first and only such undertaking in English. It lays out what is, with rare exceptions, an unknown, ignored, or poorly understood aspect of Albert's humanism. It also fills in a major lacuna in both the history of medieval philosophy and the wider history of moral theory."--Jacket.
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Reclaiming moral agency: the moral philosophy of Albert the Great
2008, Catholic University of America Press
in English
0813215404 9780813215402
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Table of Contents
Albert and the career of virtue theory
Modern virtue theory as foreground to Albert's moral philosophy
Albert's ethical treatises
The significance of Albert's moral treatises in early-thirteenth-century moral philosophy
Approaching the moral order
Meta-ethical reflections on "moral science" and its procedures
The metaphysics of the good
The architecture of moral goodness
The genesis of virtue : intrinsic causes
The genesis of virtue : extrinsic causes
The concept of virtue
The organization of the virtues
The passions
Morality, obligation, and law
Natural law
Virtue's rewards
Friendship
Last ends and happiness
Conclusion: Albertus redux.
Edition Notes
Includes bibliographical references and index.
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