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CONCEPT

The Virtues of the Practitioner

MacIntyre’s claim that the excellences constitutive of a good human life are cultivated specifically through sustained engagement with demanding practices—and that no machine, however capable, can cultivate or possess them.
The question that [YOU] on AI is ultimately asking—what remains irreducibly human when the machine can execute?—is a question that Alasdair MacIntyre equipped moral philosophy to answer forty years before the machine arrived. His answer is not a capability gap that the machine has not yet closed. It is a categorical distinction: virtues are not capabilities, and the machine possesses only capabilities. A virtue is a disposition of character cultivated through sustained engagement with a practice—through thousands of particular encounters with difficulty, failure, correction, and judgment exercised under genuine stakes. Justice, courage, honesty, and above all phronesis—practical wisdom in the particular case—are not reducible to any specification. They cannot be encoded, automated, or outsourced, because they are constitutive of the person who exercises them, not properties that can be extracted from one agent and installed in another. The AI moment, by removing the implementation scaffold through which virtues have historically been cultivated in knowledge workers, poses the sharpest test
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