Ezumezu: A System of Logic for African Philosophy and Studies

Cham, Switzerland: Springer Verlag (2019)
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Abstract

The issue of a logic foundation for African thought connects well with the question of method. Do we need new methods for African philosophy and studies? Or, are the methods of Western thought adequate for African intellectual space? These questions are not some of the easiest to answer because they lead straight to the question of whether or not a logic tradition from African intellectual space is possible. Thus in charting the course of future direction in African philosophy and studies, one must be confronted with this question of logic. The author boldly takes up this challenge and becomes the first to do so in a book by introducing new concepts and formulating a new African culture-inspired system of logic called Ezumezu which he believes would ground new methods in African philosophy and studies. He develops this system to rescue African philosophy and, by extension, sundry fields in African Indigenous Knowledge Systems from the spell of Plato and the hegemony of Aristotle. African philosophers can now ground their discourses in Ezumezu logic which will distinguish their philosophy as a tradition in its own right. On the whole, the book engages with some of the lingering controversies in the idea of African logic before unveiling Ezumezu as a philosophy of logic, methodology and formal system. The book also provides fresh arguments and insights on the themes of decolonisation and Africanisation for the intellectual transformation of scholarship in Africa. It will appeal to philosophers and logicians—undergraduates and post graduate researchers—as well as those in various areas of African studies.

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Chapters

How Ezumezu Logic Grounds Some Theories in African Philosophy with a Special Focus on Afro-Communitarianism

With the structure of Ezumezu laid out in preceding chapters, I want to now demonstrate how Ezumezu logic actually grounds theories in African philosophy and studies. I argue that some theories in African philosophy can be grounded in an Africa-developed system of logic to demonstrate their original... see more

Ezumezu as a Formal System

A system of logic is a formal theory equipped with laws and elementary syntactic and semantic definitions specifying ways of applying those laws in reasoning and revising assumptions out of which certain conclusions could be drawn from certain premises. Here, I shall discuss the universe of discours... see more

Ezumezu as Methodology

My main aim in this chapter is to lead a charge against the Western methodological hegemony and lay down principles that will demonstrate the independence of African philosophy and intellectual tradition. To do this, I will first identify and discuss three pillars of thought in Ezumezu methodology n... see more

Ezumezu as Philosophy of Logic

In this chapter, I aim to discuss the philosophy of African logic from the perspective of Ezumezu logic. In the first section, I will present some principles of African logic and show how they justify system of African logic. The interesting thing to note here is that these principles, in addition t... see more

Decolonisation, Africanisation and Transformation: Why We Need ‘That’ African Contribution to World History and Civilisation

In this final chapter, I take up one of the most menacing problems confronting Africa in our time: the curriculum problem. The curriculum of education in Africa has two fundamental problems namely; it is colonial and thus stifles creative originality of a child, and it is fitted with alien backgroun... see more

Justifying the System of Ezumezu Logic: An Analysis of the Problematic Structure of ‘q na abughi q’

Here, I hold conversations with the Nigerian philosopher Udo Etuk and the American philosopher W. V. O. Quine whose respective essays “The Possibility of African Logic” and “Carnap and Logical Truth” have stoked the fire of exciting conversations among some philosophers on the nature of logic within... see more

African Logic and the Question of Method: Towards Villagisation of Knowledge

Do we need new methods for African philosophy? Or, are the methods of Western philosophy adequate for African philosophy? These questions are not some of the easiest to answer in African philosophy. In charting the course of future direction in African philosophy, one must be confronted with these q... see more

The Schools of Thought in African Logic

I identify three schools of thought in the African logic debate namely, the apologists, the polemicists and the system builders. I show that while the first two are haunted by the essentialist ideologies of Afrocentricism and Eurocentricism, it is the last school that is actually doing the correct t... see more

Some Problematics in African Logic

I argue that the concern of African logic should really be about constructing systems and criticising the systems. I show that recent discussions have however threatened to veer it off-course. Instead of engaging in robust rigorous conversations, some logicians and philosophers have taken to apologi... see more

In Search of a Logic-Based Foundation for African Philosophy and Studies

In this chapter, I hold a conversation with some egg-heads in African philosophy who directly or indirectly offered explanation that attempted to answer the question about the criterion or the Africanness of philosophy. The criterion question asks two simple but challenging questions in African phil... see more

The Manifestation of Reason in African Philosophy

I argue that the manifestation of reason in Africa’s intellectual space has been logocentric since colonial times which is detrimental to the development of the African idea. I propose a transition from logocentricism to okwucentricism as a reconstruction of the identity of reason in African philoso... see more

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Author's Profile

Jonathan O Chimakonam
University of Pretoria