Emergent Issues in African Philosophy: A Dialogue with Kwasi Wiredu
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These are major excerpts from an interview that was conducted with Professor
Wiredu at Rhodes University during the thirteenth Annual Conference of The International
Society for African Philosophy and Studies (April 3, 2007). He speaks on a wide range of
issues, such as political and personal identity, racism and tribalism, moral foundations, the
golden rule, African communalism, human rights, personhood, consensus, and meta-philosophy,
among other critical themes.
We are also offered what may be considered Wiredu’s definition of what constitutes
“African Philosophy.” For Wiredu, African philosophy ought not necessarily be put in contrast
to Western philosophy. African philosophy must be understood within the context
of its emergence with its associative socio-cultural and political milieu. Philosophy has no
borders, by which he encourages a wide breadth of investigation into different intellectual
traditions and an openness to learn from other traditions. He emphasized, however, that
there are basic human questions concerning a people that can only be answered by embedded
knowledge within their indigenous thought systems. It is reductionist to conceive of
African philosophy as merely “ethnophilosophy” because the body of knowledge of what
constitutes African philosophy is a critical investigation that negotiates between a series of
intellectual traditions evolving from Africa, including those discarded as mere myths and
those considered as products of modernity. The authority of African philosophy is the ability
to create meaning for a culturally differentiated society, meanings that are not anachronistic
but relevant to the sociopolitical and economic condition of the people. African
philosophy does indeed have critical resources in dealing with the challenges of democratization,
party politics, and nation-building in Africa.
With regards to moral judgment, Wiredu’s leitmotif is the golden rule—a procedural
standard to judge what action is right or wrong that is an invitation to a subjective empathy.
Here Wiredu argues for a subjective reciprocity when it comes to norms and other certain
conventions, and he interestingly sides with Menkiti in the famous Gyekye versus Menkiti
debate.
Keywords
B Philosophy (General), JA Political science (General)