[PAST EVENT] AFST First Fridays Brown Bag - African Philosophy Reconsidered: Africa, Religion, Race & Philosophy

March 3, 2017
12pm - 1pm
Location
Boswell Hall (formerly Morton Hall), Room 102
100 Ukrop Way
Williamsburg, VA 23185Map this location

The still-nascent academic discipline of African Philosophy has spent most of its energy and ink wrestling with issues of authenticity (what makes it ?African?) and validity (what makes it ?philosophy?). In this presentation, I'd like to argue for a reconsideration of these categories? ?African? and ?Philosophy??by tracing the closely-related history of their development. Then, after critiquing some of the most influential academic attempts to engage with African religious/intellectual traditions (by Evans-Pritchard, Horton, Wiredu, Appiah, Hountonji, and Mudimbe), and on the basis of this genealogy, I propose an alternative framework for approaching and understanding the intellectual traditions of the continent. Drawing on Pierre Hadot?s work on Ancient Philosophy, I argue that the vast majority of religious/intellectual traditions on the continent are better described by the ?philosophy as a way of life? paradigm exemplified by the Ancient Greeks and neo-Platonists than the ?philosophy as written, rational discourse? model of the Enlightenment. Finally, I conclude by exploring the implications this reconsideration of ?African Philosophy? has for our academic approach to African religious/intellectual traditions, theory and methodology in the social sciences and humanities, and our understandings of race, rationality, progress, and development.

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