Macintyre

Macintyre says that being a moral agent requires seeing one's self as accountable. What does this mean? Does it have anything to do with blame or punishment?
Macintyre thinks that moral agency requires a social order that encourages good critical questioning. Why (it may help to think about how this connects to questions 1 and 2)?
To what extent do Macintyre & Christiano's ideas overlap (think especially about your answers to 2 and 3)?
Macintyre thinks that highly compartmentalized societies make it hard to be a moral agent, but that we can blame the people in these societies for this. Why? How does this view connect to ideas we've covered earlier (discuss at least one of Brand-Ballard, Kagan, Talbot, or Delmas)?