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Virtue and the Meaningful Life – Dr. David McPherson

Virtue and the Meaningful Life – Dr. David McPherson

Dr. David McPherson argues that human beings are “meaning-seeking animals” and that an adequate neo-Aristotelian ethics must see the virtues as constitutive of a meaningful life ordered to strong goods such as the noble, the sacred, and love of God...

The Thomistic Institute · The Thomistic Institute

December 3, 202546m 37s

Show Notes

Dr. David McPherson argues that human beings are “meaning-seeking animals” and that an adequate neo-Aristotelian ethics must see the virtues as constitutive of a meaningful life ordered to strong goods such as the noble, the sacred, and love of God and neighbor.​


This lecture was given on October 16th, 2025, at University of Florida.


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About the Speakers:


David McPherson is Professor of Philosophy in the Hamilton School for Classical and Civic Education at the University of Florida as well as Affiliate Professor in the Department of Philosophy. Previously, he was Associate Professor of Philosophy at Creighton University, and during academic year 2021-22 he was Visiting Research Professor at the University of Colorado Boulder. McPherson works in the areas of ethics (especially virtue ethics), political philosophy, meaning in life, and philosophy of religion. He is the author of The Virtues of Limits (Oxford University Press, 2022) and Virtue and Meaning: A Neo-Aristotelian Perspective (Cambridge University Press, 2020), as well as the editor of Spirituality and the Good Life: Philosophical Approaches (Cambridge University Press, 2017).


Keywords: Aristotelian Virtue Ethics, Constitutive View Of Happiness, Meaning-Seeking Animal, Nicomachean Ethics, Religious Hope, Stoicism And Loss, Strong Evaluative Meaning, Theological Virtues, Virtue And Happiness, Wartime Martyrdom

Topics

Aristotelian Virtue EthicsConstitutive View Of HappinessMeaning-Seeking AnimalNicomachean EthicsReligious HopeStoicism And LossStrong Evaluative MeaningTheological VirtuesVirtue And HappinessWartime Martyrdom