One of the fundamental aspects of the cultural landscape of the last
century has been the revival of philosophical anthropology, often in the
form of a radical examination of the humanum. This renaissance
constitutes an attempt to meet the primary challenges posed by an era
which profoundly doubts the very possibility of a semantics of humanism.
This book argues that MacIntyrean thought offers an important
contribution to the development of a new semantics of humanism, since it
enables dialogue and rational competition among perspectives belonging
to rival intellectual traditions. The volume explores a variety of
fresh, intriguing takes on the question of rationality and the human in
an age of advanced modernity.