70
Mark Washofsky
156.
Alisdair MacIntyre , After Virtue(Notre Dame : U. of Notre Dame Press, 1981), 207(p. 222 in the second edition, published in 1984). In his Whose Justice? Whose Rationality?(Notre Dame : U. of Notre Dame Press, 1988, 12), MacIn tyre expands his definition as follows:“A tradition is an argument extended through time in which certain fundamental agreements are defined and redefined in terms of two kinds of conflict: those with critics and enemies external to the tradition... and those internal, interpretive debates through which the meaning and rationale of the fundamental agreements come to be
expressed and by whose progress a tradition is constituted.”
.Put differently, a tradition is“the necessary framework to rational argu