RT Article T1 Making Good People … Rather than Making People Good? JF Journal of Anglican studies VO 13 IS 2 SP 156 OP 171 A1 Platten, Stephen 1947- LA English YR 2015 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1570092044 AB The paper investigates the roots of a virtue-based ethics within Anglicanism starting with the Caroline tradition in the seventeenth century. In the twentieth century there was a rebirth of ‘Anglican Moral Theology' with the work of Kenneth Kirk, Robert Mortimer and Lindsay Dewar. Issues of perfectibility are examined. The recovery of the Orthodox tradition of deification at the present time and the rebirth of virtue ethics through the work of Alasdair McIntyre are explored. Anglicanism is rooted in an approach where grace is already present in the natural order but which is enhanced by an integralist approach to theology bringing together doctrinal, ascetic and moral theology in one compass. K1 Anglicanism K1 Caroline Divines K1 Eudaimonism K1 Grace K1 integralist ethics K1 Kenneth Kirk K1 Mattering K1 Richard Hooker K1 Teleology DO 10.1017/S1740355315000091