George Hull is Senior Lecturer in Philosophy at the University of Cape Town, South Africa.
Inhaltsangabe
Foreword by Lungisile Ntsebeza Introduction Part I: Decolonising Philosophy 1 Ottobah Cugoano's Place in the History of Political Philosophy: Slavery and the Philosophical Canon 2 Decolonizing Bioethics via African Philosophy: Moral Neocolonialism as a Bioethical Problem 3 A Philosophy Without Memory Cannot Abolish Slavery: On Epistemic Justice in South Africa Part II: Race, Justice, Identity 4 Neville Alexander and the Non-racialism of the Unity Movement 5 Biko on Non-white and Black: Improving Social Reality 6 Black Autarchy/White Domination: Fractured Language and Racial Politics During Apartheid and Beyond via Biko and Lyotard 7 Impartiality, Partiality and Privilege: The View from South Africa Part III: Moral Debates 8 Making Sense of Survivor's Guilt: Why It Is Justified by an African Ethic 9 African Philosophy and Nonhuman Nature 10 On Cultural Universals and Particulars 11 The Metz Method and 'African Ethics' Part IV: Meta-Philosophy 12 The Edges of (African) Philosophy 13 Is Philosophy Bound by Language? Some Case Studies from African Philosophy 14 African Philosophy in the Context of a University Part V: Comparative Perspectives 15 Relational Normative Thought in Ubuntu and Neo-republicanism 16 African Philosophy, Disability, and the Social Conception of the Self
Foreword by Lungisile Ntsebeza Introduction Part I: Decolonising Philosophy 1 Ottobah Cugoano's Place in the History of Political Philosophy: Slavery and the Philosophical Canon 2 Decolonizing Bioethics via African Philosophy: Moral Neocolonialism as a Bioethical Problem 3 A Philosophy Without Memory Cannot Abolish Slavery: On Epistemic Justice in South Africa Part II: Race, Justice, Identity 4 Neville Alexander and the Non-racialism of the Unity Movement 5 Biko on Non-white and Black: Improving Social Reality 6 Black Autarchy/White Domination: Fractured Language and Racial Politics During Apartheid and Beyond via Biko and Lyotard 7 Impartiality, Partiality and Privilege: The View from South Africa Part III: Moral Debates 8 Making Sense of Survivor's Guilt: Why It Is Justified by an African Ethic 9 African Philosophy and Nonhuman Nature 10 On Cultural Universals and Particulars 11 The Metz Method and 'African Ethics' Part IV: Meta-Philosophy 12 The Edges of (African) Philosophy 13 Is Philosophy Bound by Language? Some Case Studies from African Philosophy 14 African Philosophy in the Context of a University Part V: Comparative Perspectives 15 Relational Normative Thought in Ubuntu and Neo-republicanism 16 African Philosophy, Disability, and the Social Conception of the Self
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