The Black Forum 2 - The BN Village Home
WE ARE CURRENTLY UPGRADING & RELOCATING THE BLACK FORUM!!!! (BNVILLAGE)

------ THIS AREA WILL BE READ ONLY AS OF 18th JUNE 07 -----
----- PLEASE ONLY USE www.bnvillage.co.uk -----

THE BNVILLAGE WILL NOW BE LOCATED @ www.bnvillage.co.uk



Search
   
Login

Register

Members

Calendar

Help

Home
Search by username


African Philosophy: [4] Trends
 Moderated by: Saida.M, safetyblitz, Raven, Miss Brighter Days, LadyDay, Kunjufu, Kibibi, Happiness, Dillinger, Breadfruit, Backatya  

New Topic

Reply

Print
Author
Post
BN Village Guidelines
Fine1952
Villager


Joined: Tuesday January 4th, 2005
Location: Ohio USA
Posts: 458
Photo: 
Status:  Offline
Mana: 

Click here for your Black Profile

Search for Black Sites

 Posted: Thursday June 8th, 2006 15:57

Quote

Reply


http://faculty.msmc.edu/lindeman/af.html#Ethnophilosophy

http://users.ox.ac.uk/~shil0124/african-philosophy.html

1. Ethnophilosophy--Paulin Hountondji to refer to the works of those anthropologists, sociologists, ethnographers and philosophers who present collective philosophies of life of African peoples. Ethnophilosophy is thus a specialized and wholly customs dictated philosophy that requires a communal consensus. It identifies with the totality of customs and common beliefs of a people. It is a folk philosophy. An ethnophilosopher is committed to the task of describing a world outlook or thought system of a particular African community or the whole of Africa. Apart from Paulin Hountondji, it is also represented by authors such as Placid Temples, Leopold Senghor, John Mbiti and Kagame.

2. Philosophic sagacity--is a reflective system of thought based on the wisdom and the traditions of people. Basically it is a reflection of a person who is acknowledged both as a sage and a thinker. As a sage, the person is well versed in the wisdoms of his/her people and the people of a particular society will quickly recognize that sages possess that wisdom. But that is not enough. For it is possible to be a sage and not a thinker. The acknowledged sage must also be a thinker who is rationally critical and are capable of conceiving excellent options and recommending ideas that offer alternatives to the commonly accepted opinions and practices. Sages therefore transcend the communal wisdom and remain the spokespersons of their culture. Sagacity philosophers are convinced that the study of African Philosophy does not consist in the study of general works but in identifying wise women and men in society whose repute is very high on the basis of their wisdom. By interviewing them, their recorded wisdom and that of the professional philosopher amount to true African thought. Their aim is to show that literacy is not a necessary condition for philosophical reflection and exposition and that in Africa, there are critical independent thinkers who guide their thought and judgments by the power of reason and inborn insight. Their philosophy is based on: the evidence of their research. For instance. in Marcel Griaule's Conversations with Oqotemmeli: An Introduction to Dogan Religious Idea. Ogotemelli is a sage who is interviewed by Marcel and the result is the philosophy of religion of the Dogan people. This philosophical trend is a creation of Professor Odera H. Oruka of Nairobi University and it is a trend subscribed by many contemporary philosophers mostly in Eastern Africa and other parts of Africa.

3. Professional philosophy--consists in the analysis and interpretation of reality in general. It further consists of criticism and argument, which to them, are the essential characteristics and conditions for any form of knowledge to be judged as philosophy. Philosophy to them is a universal discipline that has the same meaning in all cultures in spite of the fact that a particular philosopher maybe conditioned by cultural biases, method and the existential situation in his/her society. According to this school represented by basically four African philosophers, Kwasi Wiredu, Paulin Hountondji, Oruka Odera and Peter Bodunrin, African philosophy is the philosophy done by African philosophers be it on the subject matter that is African or alien. To these philosophers, African philosophy today is predominantly a metaphilosophy dealing with the central theme of, "What is philosophy?" and the corollary, "What is African philosophy?" Viewed in this context, it has some limitations that have been, identified by Odera H. Oruka as lacking personal subject matter, a prolonged history of debates and literature to preserve and expand itself as well as a limited degree of self-criticism.

4. Nationalist-ideological philosophy--is a system of though, based on traditional African socialism and familyhood. It represented by the works of politicians like Kwame Nkrumah, Julius Nyerere and Leopold Senghor. This trend of philosophy aims at seeking a true and a meaningful freedom for African people that can be attained by mental liberation and a return to genuine traditional African humanism wherever it is possible. So it is basically a socio-political philosophy.

---------

Africa's Map of her 55 countries:

Attachment: africa20.gif (Downloaded 80 times)

Last edited on Friday June 9th, 2006 13:51 by Fine1952



____________________
"It is not who you attend school with but who controls the school you attend." ~ Nikki Giovanni

____________________
Click here for your Black Profile
Aryek
Villager


Joined: Saturday February 5th, 2005
Location:  
Posts: 2447
Photo: 
Status:  Offline
Mana: 

Click here for your Black Profile

Search for Black Sites

 Posted: Tuesday June 13th, 2006 22:40

Quote

Reply
Personally I don't see Professional Philosophy is "African" philosophy.  The trend is heavily influenced by European philosophy and a lot of the philosophers in this genre will disregard parts of the African tradition that does not coincide with European thought. 



____________________
www.blacksearch.co.uk - Helping to promote Black African and Caribbean Websites
Fine1952
Villager


Joined: Tuesday January 4th, 2005
Location: Ohio USA
Posts: 458
Photo: 
Status:  Offline
Mana: 

Click here for your Black Profile

Search for Black Sites

 Posted: Wednesday June 14th, 2006 00:07

Quote

Reply
True. African intellectuals have been, also, hopelessly enfluenced by the dark left, Western side of thinking.

Last edited on Wednesday June 14th, 2006 19:21 by Fine1952



____________________
"It is not who you attend school with but who controls the school you attend." ~ Nikki Giovanni

____________________
Click here for your Black Profile

 Current time is 22:41


Join the
Blacknet
mailing list

Name

Email address

Age

General




Search
   
Login

Register

Members

Calendar

Help

Home
Search by username



News>>> Black Chat>>> What's On>>> Black Search>>> Black Forums>>> Black History>>>
Games
>>> Homelands >>> Business>>> Entertainment >>> Beauty>>> Religion>>>
Recipe
>>> Magazines>>> Buy & Sell >>> Webpals>>>
Sponsors>>> Black Family Day >>> Homepage

Join Black net Mailing List!!! It's FREE!!

or or call us Tel: (+44) 0870 746 5000 - Fax: (+44) 020 8692 9755


BNVillage - More than just a web site...
© 1996-2006 Black net UK All rights reserved.
Blacksearch.co.uk / Blackchat.co.uk/ Blackprofessional.co.uk

Please read Disclaimer