
Hegel’s Twilight : Liber Amicorum Discipulorumque Pro Heinz Kimmerle.
Title:
Hegel’s Twilight : Liber Amicorum Discipulorumque Pro Heinz Kimmerle.
Author:
Ramose, Mogobe B.
ISBN:
9789401209311
Personal Author:
Edition:
1st ed.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (243 pages)
Contents:
Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- TABLE OF CONTENTS -- INTRODUCTION -- EDITORIAL NOTE -- PART ONE -- Way of thinking, thinking of way(s) -- Beyond crossing borders, beyond intercultural philosophy -- Cosmopolitan aesthetics -- PART TWO -- "Ad multos et faustos annos!" Professeur Kimmerle -- Aesthetics of Gikuyu proverbs -- "One person cannot embrace a baobab" About hospitality in philosophy -- Poverty and Ubuntu -- PART THREE -- Model synthesis as a meta-heuristics for realistic descriptive models -- Nkrumah and Hountondji on ethno-philosophy A critical appraisal -- Crisis and critique. Return of Marxism? -- PART FOUR -- AIDS and the challenge of rethinking sex education in postcolonial Africa. An Afro-philosophical perspective -- An African perspective on the strategic significance of HIV/AIDS for Africa and her Diaspora -- ABOUT THE AUTHORS -- ABOUT THE BOOK.
Abstract:
Professor Heinz Kimmerle encountered African philosophy at a time when his specialisation in the philosophy of Hegel had attained world recognition. For Hegel, African philosophy did not exist in Sub-Saharan Africa, exactly the area in which Kimmerle made his first contact with African philosophy. Hegel's philosophy was not a stranger to Sub-Saharan Africa. This was because the Western educational paradigm was imposed upon the conquered, colonized peoples during the period of colonisation. Unlike Hegel, Kimmerle took African philosophy seriously and engaged, initially, in dialogues with African philosophy. Out of the unfolding dialogues grew intercultural philosophy spearheaded by Kimmerle's penetrating, insightful and incisive critique of some of the fundamental presuppositions of Hegel's philosophy. The essays contained in this book focus on the evolution of Kimmerle's conception and meaning of intercultural philosophy. Underlying this are recognition and respect for other modes of doing philosophy as manifestations of intercultural philosophy. To deny dialogues, if you prefer, polylogue among world philosophies, is to reject the very basis of philosophy. Thus a crucial dimension of philosophy would be precluded, which can be found in this book, namely, the critical evaluation of Kimmerle's conception and meaning of intercultural philosophy.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
Genre:
Electronic Access:
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