A critical exploration of the ideas of person and community in traditional Zulu thought.

Magister Artium - MA === The issue of personhood has long been of concern to many philosophers. The primary concern has been about determining the necessary and sufficient conditions for an entity to be a person at a particular point in time. The most common answer in Western terms is that to be a...

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Main Author: Ndlovu, Sanelisiwe Primrose
Other Authors: Oyowe, Oritsegbubemi
Language:en
Published: University of the Western Cape 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11394/8346
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uwc-oai-etd.uwc.ac.za-11394-83462021-08-19T05:09:12Z A critical exploration of the ideas of person and community in traditional Zulu thought. Ndlovu, Sanelisiwe Primrose Oyowe, Oritsegbubemi Southern African Zulu people African philosophy Magister Artium - MA The issue of personhood has long been of concern to many philosophers. The primary concern has been about determining the necessary and sufficient conditions for an entity to be a person at a particular point in time. The most common answer in Western terms is that to be a person at a time is to have certain special mental properties such as psychological connectedness. On the other hand, others argue that we can only ever understand the ascription of mental characteristics as part of a necessarily joint set of physically instantiated properties. Most recent contributions to the topic have however cast doubt on these earlier attempts to understand personhood solely in terms of bodily and psychological features. Not only do they suggest a model of personhood that is individualistic, they also fail to make reference to communal and social elements. In particular, many non-Western, specifically African, cultures foreground these communal and social aspects. This is true of the Akan, Yoruba and Igbo cultures. As Kwasi Wiredu and Kwame Gyekye; Dismas Masolo; Segun Gbadegesin; and Ifeanyi Menkiti have shown respectively. However, there is a lack of comparable philosophical inquiry in the Southern African context. The primary aim of this study is to critically explore the metaphysical, cultural, linguistic and normative resources of the Zulu people in understanding what it means to be a person. The approach is predominantly conceptual and analytic, but it also draws on some empirical data with a view to extending the results of the literature-based study. Not only does this extend the field of cultural inquiry to personhood, it also opens up new opportunities to tackle old problems in the debate, including the question of what should be the proper relationship between the individual and the community. Specifically, I argue that rather than focus attention on the priority of the individual or community in relation to each other, consideration of the notion of personhood in Zulu culture reveals that notwithstanding significant communal constraints forms of agency are available to individuals. http:// 2021-08-17T13:17:12Z 2021-08-17T13:17:12Z 2021 http://hdl.handle.net/11394/8346 en University of the Western Cape University of the Western Cape
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Southern African
Zulu people
African philosophy
spellingShingle Southern African
Zulu people
African philosophy
Ndlovu, Sanelisiwe Primrose
A critical exploration of the ideas of person and community in traditional Zulu thought.
description Magister Artium - MA === The issue of personhood has long been of concern to many philosophers. The primary concern has been about determining the necessary and sufficient conditions for an entity to be a person at a particular point in time. The most common answer in Western terms is that to be a person at a time is to have certain special mental properties such as psychological connectedness. On the other hand, others argue that we can only ever understand the ascription of mental characteristics as part of a necessarily joint set of physically instantiated properties. Most recent contributions to the topic have however cast doubt on these earlier attempts to understand personhood solely in terms of bodily and psychological features. Not only do they suggest a model of personhood that is individualistic, they also fail to make reference to communal and social elements. In particular, many non-Western, specifically African, cultures foreground these communal and social aspects. This is true of the Akan, Yoruba and Igbo cultures. As Kwasi Wiredu and Kwame Gyekye; Dismas Masolo; Segun Gbadegesin; and Ifeanyi Menkiti have shown respectively. However, there is a lack of comparable philosophical inquiry in the Southern African context. The primary aim of this study is to critically explore the metaphysical, cultural, linguistic and normative resources of the Zulu people in understanding what it means to be a person. The approach is predominantly conceptual and analytic, but it also draws on some empirical data with a view to extending the results of the literature-based study. Not only does this extend the field of cultural inquiry to personhood, it also opens up new opportunities to tackle old problems in the debate, including the question of what should be the proper relationship between the individual and the community. Specifically, I argue that rather than focus attention on the priority of the individual or community in relation to each other, consideration of the notion of personhood in Zulu culture reveals that notwithstanding significant communal constraints forms of agency are available to individuals. http://
author2 Oyowe, Oritsegbubemi
author_facet Oyowe, Oritsegbubemi
Ndlovu, Sanelisiwe Primrose
author Ndlovu, Sanelisiwe Primrose
author_sort Ndlovu, Sanelisiwe Primrose
title A critical exploration of the ideas of person and community in traditional Zulu thought.
title_short A critical exploration of the ideas of person and community in traditional Zulu thought.
title_full A critical exploration of the ideas of person and community in traditional Zulu thought.
title_fullStr A critical exploration of the ideas of person and community in traditional Zulu thought.
title_full_unstemmed A critical exploration of the ideas of person and community in traditional Zulu thought.
title_sort critical exploration of the ideas of person and community in traditional zulu thought.
publisher University of the Western Cape
publishDate 2021
url http://hdl.handle.net/11394/8346
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