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AFRICAN ETHICS AND PARTIALITY
Author(s) -
Motsamai Molefe
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
phronimon
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2413-3086
pISSN - 1561-4018
DOI - 10.25159/2413-3086/1988
Subject(s) - impartiality , personhood , argument (complex analysis) , normative , epistemology , sociology , normative ethics , philosophy , medicine
This article explores the question whether African ethics is best captured in terms of partiality or impartiality. I take one influential instance of a defence of impartiality in the African tradition, sympathetic impartiality, by Kwasi Wiredu, and I use it as a foil to represent African ethics. I argue that impartiality, as represented by Wiredu, fails to cohere with moral intuitions characteristic of African moral thought, namely: the high prize usually accorded to the family, veneration of ancestors and the notion of personhood. I merely touch on the first two intuitions; I base my argument largely on the normative concept of personhood that is considered to be definitive of African moral thought.

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