Catholic Social Teaching and the Firm: Crowding in Virtue: A MacIntyrean Approach to Business Ethics

American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 88 (4):779-805 (2014)
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Abstract

Catholic Social Teaching aspires to an economy that serves needs, upholds justice, and inculcates subsidiarity. But it suffers from a significant omission—it fails to look “inside” the business organisations that comprise the fundamental building blocks of the economic system. It is therefore ill-equipped to suggest how businesses could be reformed to meet these aspirations. MacIntyre’s Thomistic Aristotelian account of the relationships between goods, virtues, practices and institutions provides resources that could enable CST to overcome this lacuna. This paper describes the MacIntyrean account and compares it with CST’s existing categories. It then analyses the case of the Lloyds Banking Group. This allows not only diagnosis, but potentially a prescriptive account of how virtue may be “crowded-in” to business organisations. The paper concludes by suggesting that this approach might make a distinctive contribution to CST, and hence enable CST to make an even more significant contribution to business ethics.

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Geoff Moore
Durham University

References found in this work

Humanizing Business.Geoff Moore - 2005 - Business Ethics Quarterly 15 (2):237-255.
Corporate Character.Geoff Moore - 2005 - Business Ethics Quarterly 15 (4):659-685.
Corporate Character.Geoff Moore - 2005 - Business Ethics Quarterly 15 (4):659-685.
The Uses and Abuses of Agency Theory.Joseph Heath - 2009 - Business Ethics Quarterly 19 (4):497-528.
Justice after virtue.Charles Taylor - 1994 - In John P. Horton & Susan Mendus (eds.), After Macintyre: Critical Perspectives on the Work of Alasdair Macintyre. University of Notre Dame Press.

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