Rethinking World Philosophies from African Philosophy

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Benedetta Lanfranchi

Abstract




This article argues that if world philosophies are to remain relevant for social emancipation in the present time, they must incorporate critical reflections about the methods and sources of philosophy that were at the center of the African philosophy debates in the 1970s and 1980s. The debates that surrounded the emergence of African philosophy as an academic discipline entailed thorough and innovative methodological reflections on the role of ethnography, language, and genre in philosophical expression. These reflections critically recast the relationship between indigenous traditions and academic texts and between popular and professional philosophical expression, enabling their practitioners to re-think the important questions of what it means to philosophize and who philosophizes. My argument is that these methodological reflections from African philosophy reveal the profound and essential link between methods and content of philosophy and that they must be incorporated as key methodologies for world philosophies to tackle questions of social and political relevance in the present time.




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How to Cite
Lanfranchi, B. (2023). Rethinking World Philosophies from African Philosophy. Journal of World Philosophies, 7(2). Retrieved from https://scholarworks.iu.edu/iupjournals/index.php/jwp/article/view/5881
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