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  1. Review of Kwame Anthony Appiah: In My Father's House: Africa in the Philosophy of Culture[REVIEW]Oladipo Fashina - 1994 - Ethics 104 (4):900-902.
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  • Conceptual Decolonization in African Philosophy: Four Essays.Kwasi Wiredu - 1995 - Ibadan, Nigeria: Hope Publications.
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  • In My Father's House: Africa in the Philosophy of Culture.Kwame Anthony Appiah - 1992 - Oxford University Press.
    Abusua do funu. The matriclan loves a corpse. AKAN PROVERB My father died, as I say, while I was trying to finish this book. His funeral was an occasion for strengthening and reaffirming the ties that bind me to Ghana and “my father's house' ...
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  • I doubt, therefore African philosophy exists.Mogobe Ramose - 2003 - South African Journal of Philosophy 22 (2):113-127.
    In this essay the question whether or not African philosophy exists is considered through an examination of the meaning of doubt. In St. Augustine and Descartes the basic presupposition with regard to doubt is the indubitable certainty that the doubting subject must exist before there can be any doubt at all. By parity of reasoning, African philosophy must first exist before it can doubt its own existence or be doubted by another. The origin and meaning of the term “Africa” is (...)
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  • (1 other version)African philosophy: myth and reality.Paulin J. Hountondji - 1983 - Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
    In this seminal exploration of the nature and future of African philosophy, Paulin J. Hountondji attacks a myth popularized by ethnophilosophers such as Placide Temples and Alexis Kagame that there is an indigenous, collective African philosophy, separate and distinct from the Western philosophical tradition. Hountondji contends that ideological manifestations of this view that stress the uniqueness of the African experience are protonationalist reactions against colonialism conducted, paradoxically, in the terms of colonialist discourse.
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  • African Philosophy: Myth and Reality.Paulin Hountondji - 1974 - Thought and Practice: A Journal of the Philosophical Association of Kenya 1 (2):1--16.
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  • Indigenous Ecological Knowledge and Modern Western Ecological Knowledge: Complementary, not Contradictory.Jacinta Mwende Maweu - 2011 - Thought and Practice: A Journal of the Philosophical Association of Kenya 3 (2):35-47.
    Indigenous knowledge is often dismissed as ‘traditional and outdated’, and hence irrelevant to modern ecological assessment. This theoretical paper critically examines the arguments advanced to elevate modern western ecological knowledge over indigenous ecological knowledge, as well as the sources and uses of indigenous ecological knowledge. The central argument of the paper is that although the two systems are conceptually different, it would be fallacious to regard one as superior to the other merely because they are premised on different worldviews.
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  • Knowledge, Education and the Limits of Africanisation.Kai Horsthemke - 2004 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 38 (4):571-587.
    Abstract‘Africanisation’ has, during the last few decades, been a buzzword that has enjoyed special currency in South Africa. Africanisation is generally seen to signal a (renewed) focus on Africa, on reclamation of what has been taken from Africa, and, as such, it forms part of post-colonialist, anti-racist discourse. With regard to knowledge, it comprises a focus on indigenous African knowledge and concerns simultaneously ‘legitimation’ and ‘protection from exploitation’ of this knowledge. With regard to education, the focus is on Africanisation of (...)
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  • Theological Education.[author unknown] - 1965 - International Philosophical Quarterly 5 (2):330-330.
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