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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mokoena, Thabo Samuel
Format: Recurso digital
Language:English
Published: Zenodo 2025
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18506977
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  • <p><span>This article critically examines the proposition that African philosophy, as a distinct mode of thought, emerged primarily through the African-European encounter, particularly through the lens of Okolo’s assertion that African philosophy did not predate this connection. It interrogates whether philosophy in Africa—understood as rigorous, reflective, and critical thinking—can be said to exist independently of European intellectual frameworks. The paper challenges Okolo’s implication that African philosophical sagacity arose only as a reaction to external influences, suggesting instead that pre-colonial African cultural and intellectual traditions contained the foundational elements of philosophical inquiry, albeit expressed differently from Western norms. Drawing on existential concepts such as “being” and “being-with,” the paper reconsiders whether African philosophy can be grounded in indigenous ontological experiences and worldviews without recourse to European mediation. It further responds to critical scepticism of Okolo’s “deficiency” by investigating the historical periodisation of African philosophy, arguing for a reconsideration of the spatial and temporal loci of African philosophical traditions. Ultimately, the article advances the position that a credible African philosophy must be rooted in Africa’s own epistemological and ontological frameworks, and that African thinkers must reclaim and affirm these systems of thought as legitimate, original, and philosophically rigorous.</span></p>