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The epistemological crisis of Marxian economic theory
Author(s) -
Matías Petersen
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
prometeica
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.101
0
ISSN - 1852-9488
DOI - 10.34024/prometeica.2020.20.10021
Subject(s) - criticism , capitalism , modernity , politics , epistemology , order (exchange) , neoclassical economics , political philosophy , critical theory , sociology , obstacle , positive economics , economics , philosophy , political science , law , finance
In Ethics in the Conflicts of Modernity, MacIntyre argues that neo-Aristotelians have much to learn from Marx’s economic theory, not only for understanding the nature of capitalism, but also for thinking about alternative social and political institutions. This article outlines the arguments given by MacIntyre for embracing Marxian economic theory and argues that if Marxian economics is a tradition of enquiry, in the MacIntyrean sense of the term, we should take seriously the debates within this tradition in order to conclude whether it has been able to withstand internal and external criticism. I argue that Marxian economic theory, as a tradition of enquiry, has been defeated by its opponents and that a synthesis between Aristotelian moral philosophy and Marxian economics is an obstacle to the development of MacIntyre’s political philosophy.

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