This paper is a defence for African thought system. We quite agree with Professor Olusegun Oladipo that African philosophers are in the best position to carry out coherent reflections on Africans philosophical issues and ideas. It is unfortunate and disgusting that many people across the world today still think like E. Ludwig, that “Africans are incapable of any philosophical conception”. Some, who are more liberal, opines that, Africans are capable of reasoning intelligently, but at the lowest ebb of thought. This is sad, evidences abound that Africans compete favourably with counterparts across the globe; in world universities like Harvard, Cambridge and Oxford etc. This work has therefore reflected on African thought system on time conce...
A linear concept of time forms the basis of most of our use of the first testament, both scholarly a...
In the documentation of the historical development of the world, Africa has been tacitly ignored. To...
It has been the position of many Eurocentric invaders, anthropologists, ethnographers, philosophers ...
This paper is a defence for African thought system. We quite agree with Professor Olusegun Oladipo t...
The metaphorical concept of African time is one in which tardiness, lousiness and a total disregard ...
The concept of time is coeval with man’s existence and coterminous with his endeavours and aff...
This essay offers a critique of the controversial proposal that peculiarities in African thought con...
If there is one thing that philosophers agree upon, it is that the meaning of time is a central phil...
The discourse on the meaningfulness of Africans has taken various dimensions over the decades, espec...
The article describes the African concept of time. The African concept of time is one that has never...
This paper argues that the continued emphasis on ethno-philosophy and the relative absence of intell...
The notion that Africans lack a sense of future was extensively debated following John Mbiti's Afric...
In delineating the temporal consciousness of the people belonging to a traditional African culture, ...
Presented at the National Conference of Black Studies March 9th, 2012 in Atlanta, GA
“The Implications of Africa-centered Conceptions of Time and Space for Quantitative Theorizing,” loo...
A linear concept of time forms the basis of most of our use of the first testament, both scholarly a...
In the documentation of the historical development of the world, Africa has been tacitly ignored. To...
It has been the position of many Eurocentric invaders, anthropologists, ethnographers, philosophers ...
This paper is a defence for African thought system. We quite agree with Professor Olusegun Oladipo t...
The metaphorical concept of African time is one in which tardiness, lousiness and a total disregard ...
The concept of time is coeval with man’s existence and coterminous with his endeavours and aff...
This essay offers a critique of the controversial proposal that peculiarities in African thought con...
If there is one thing that philosophers agree upon, it is that the meaning of time is a central phil...
The discourse on the meaningfulness of Africans has taken various dimensions over the decades, espec...
The article describes the African concept of time. The African concept of time is one that has never...
This paper argues that the continued emphasis on ethno-philosophy and the relative absence of intell...
The notion that Africans lack a sense of future was extensively debated following John Mbiti's Afric...
In delineating the temporal consciousness of the people belonging to a traditional African culture, ...
Presented at the National Conference of Black Studies March 9th, 2012 in Atlanta, GA
“The Implications of Africa-centered Conceptions of Time and Space for Quantitative Theorizing,” loo...
A linear concept of time forms the basis of most of our use of the first testament, both scholarly a...
In the documentation of the historical development of the world, Africa has been tacitly ignored. To...
It has been the position of many Eurocentric invaders, anthropologists, ethnographers, philosophers ...