GST203 Module 2
GST203 Module 2
GST203 Module 2
Contents
1.0 Introduction
2.0 Intended Learning Outcomes (ILOs)
3.0 Main Contents
3.1 Pre-Socratic Age
3.1.1 Thales
3.1.2 Anaximander
3.1.3 Anaximenex
3.2 Other Philosophers of the Pre-Socratic Age
3.2.1 Heraclitus
3.2.2 Parmenedes
3.2.3 Zeno of Elea
3.2.4 Empedocles, Democritus and Pythagoras
3.3 Socrates and the Classical Age
3.3.1 Socrates
3.3.2 Plato
3.3.3 Aristotle
3.4 Philosophical movement of the Socratic Age
4.0 Conclusion
5.0 Summary
6.0 Tutor-Marked Assignment
1.0 Introduction
In this unit, you will be introduced to the history and development of philosophy,
from the ancient age to the contemporary age. You will also read about the major
pre-occupation(s) of some philosophers that were prominent in each of the stages
of the development of philosophy. You need to know that these stages of
development in philosophy are sometimes referred to as an age. So, we shall be
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talking about ‘The Pre-Socratic Age’, ‘The Mediaeval Age’, ‘Modern Age’, and so
on.
But in this unit, you wil be examining the Ancient Age of philosophy
3.1.1 Pre-Socratic
As you are aware, philosophy grew out of wonder and curiosity. What is known as
Western Philosophy- by which we usually mean everything apart from the Eastern
Philosophy of China, Indian, Japan, etc. really began in Greece in about 6th B.C.
But, you need to know that before this period, the Greeks have always been asking
questions on issues that concerns man and his existence. They ask questions
about reality, cosmos, and other fundamental matters that surrounds human
existence. Answers to these questions are always sought through religion and
mythology. However, at some point, answers to some of these questions are
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considered not rational enough, especially by Thales, Anaximander and
Aneximenes as prominent figures. These group of thinkers were curious to know
the ultimate source of things. Thus, the question; what is the ultimate source or
primary source of all things? This question got different responses from the three
philosophers and they attempt a more rational response to the above question and
offer a rational explanation of the universe.
3.1.3 Anaximander
He is the second Greek philosopher and he was a pupil of Thales. He was also
from Miletus in Ionia. Like his master, he held that there must be an original
element, a primary stuff of which all things were made. But he did not think it was
water as Thales did. According to him, the primary source of all things cannot be
any of the things we know because all the elements we know conflict with each
other. If any of them were the original stuff, it would simply conquer and submerge
the others. The source of all things must therefore be a neutral element, different
from all the elements we know. It must be infinite, boundless, eternal and
indeterminate. You also must know that Anaximander maintained that this world
is not the only world that exist. He believed that there are many worlds and this
world of ours is just one of them. He is said to have made the first map ever in
history. He is also regarded as the early evolutionist, because he maintained that
all living things originated from the sea and during time developed into various
forms by means of adaptations to the environment. He believed that man also
evolved from animals but not the kinds of animals we know. He is known to have
maintained that the earth is like a cylinder in shape, a position that differentiate him
from those who believed that the world is flat.
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3.1.4 Anaximenes
He is also from Miletus and he is the third Greek philosopher. Like his
predecessors, he also believes that there must be an original stuff from which all
things are made, the primary source or underlying source of all things. To him, this
is Air and not Water. Air is the original source and the primary element of all things.
“Just as our soul being air, hold us together, so do breathe and air encompass the
whole world”. To explain his position, he develops what he called the theory of
condensation and refraction. When air rarefies, it become light and turns into
fire; and when it condenses it become cold, thick and turn into winds, cloud, water,
earth and finally stones, both hot and cold, light and thick things, indeed all things
came from condensation and refraction. Thus, by these processes, all things came
from air and will dissolve into air. To Anaximenes, the earth is flat and rests on air.
Although, these three philosophers came from the same city called Miletus in Ionia
and their philosophical discussion was referred to as the Ionian School of
philosophy, however, this school of philosophy came to an end with the destruction
of the city of Miletus by the Persian in 494BC.
Another issue the Pre-Socratics wrestled with was the so-called problem of
change, how things appear to change from one form to another. Some of the
philosophers who engaged themselves in this issue are, Heraclitus, Parmenides,
Zeno of Elea, Empedocles, Democritus and Pythagoras.
3.2.1 Heraclitus
In seeking for the primary source of all things, like the three Ionians, he thought
that the original stuff from which all things were made is Fire. However, Heraclitus
was more preoccupied with the problem of change in his philosophical enterprise.
He believed in an on-going process of perpetual change, a constant interplay of
opposites. Given his believe that everything in the universe undergoes perpetual
change, he at a time asserted that “Nothing is static, everything is in a state of
flux”.
3.2.2 Parmenedes
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He was a student of Parmenedes, and is best known for his famous paradoxes of
motion (the best known of which is that of the Achilles and the Hare). His idea
of paradoxes of motion helped to lay the foundations for the study of Logic.
However, Zeno’s underlying intention was really to show, like his master
Parmenedes and all other before him, that all belief in plurality and change is
mistaken, and that motion is nothing but an illusion.
Although, these ideas might seem to us rather simplistic and unconvincing today,
we should bear in mind that, during this time, there was really no scientific
knowledge whatsoever. Their attempts were therefore important first steps in the
development of philosophical thought. They also set the stage for two other
important Pre-Socratic philosophers: Empedocles and Democritus.
These two, Empedocles and Democritus combined their ideas into the theory of
the four classical elements (earth, air, fire and water), which became the
standard dogma for much of the next two thousand years. Democritus later
developed the extremely influential idea of Atomism. This theory simply states
that all of reality is composed of tiny, indivisible and indestructible building
blocks known as atoms, which form different combinations and shapes within the
surrounding void.
Another early and very influential Greek philosopher was Pythagoras, who led a
rather bizarre religious sect and essentially believed that all of reality was
governed by numbers, and that its essence could be encountered through the
study of mathematics. He is known for his claim that with figures the world can be
constructed.
3.3.1 Socrates
Philosophy really took off, though, with Socrates and Plato in the 5th - 4th Century
B.C. (often referred to as the Classical or Socratic period of philosophy). Unlike
most of the Pre-Socratic philosophers before him, Socrates was more
concerned with how people should behave, and so was perhaps the first major
philosopher of Ethics. He developed a system of critical reasoning to work out how
to live properly and to tell the difference between right and wrong. His system,
sometimes referred to as the Socratic Method, was to break problems down into a
series of questions, the answers to which would gradually distil a solution. Although
he was careful to claim not to have all the answers himself, his constant
questioning made him many enemies among the authorities of Athens who
eventually had him put to death.
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We must point out here that Socrates himself never wrote anything down, and what
we know of his views comes from the "Dialogues" of his student Plato, perhaps
the best known, most widely studied and most influential philosopher of all time.
3.3.2 Plato
In his writings, Plato was a pupil of Socrates. He blended Ethics, Metaphysics (the
study of reality), Political Philosophy and Epistemology (the theory of knowledge
and how we can acquire it) into an interconnected and systematic philosophy. He
provided the first real opposition to the Materialism of the Pre-Socratic, and he
developed doctrines such as Platonic Realism, Essentialism and Idealism,
including his important and famous theory of Forms and universals. Plato
believed that the world we perceive around us is composed of mere
representations or instances of the pure ideal Forms. The real world to him, had
their own existence elsewhere. This idea of Plato is known as Platonic Realism.
He used his theory of World of Form to develop and explain his epistemology, (he
identified the four levels of knowledge namely imagining, belief, thinking and
perfect intelligence). He also identified the soul as having three parts namely,
reason, spirit and appetite. These three parts of man’s soul are related to the
three strata or classes in the society: the individual appetites represent the class
of workers who satisfy these appetites (the craftsmen or artisans), there is a
connection between the spirited element in man and the large-scale version of this
force in the military (the guardians or the soldiers). Also, there is a deep connection
between the rational element in men and the unique function of leadership in the
ruler (the philosopher king). This tripartite distinction of the soul and the society
was used to explain his idea of Justice both in the soul and in the state. Thus, to
him, there will be justice in the soul if the three parts of the soul functions
independently of one another and there will be justice in the state if each of the
parts that is, the artisan, the soldier and the ruler operate without any
interference. Plato developed a theory known as Eudaimonism This is the
believed that virtue was a kind of knowledge (the knowledge of good and evil)
that we need in order to reach the ultimate good, which is the aim of all human
desires and actions. Plato’s Political Philosophy was developed mainly in his
famous book "Republic", where he describes an ideal (though rather grim and
anti-democratic) society composed of Workers and Warriors, ruled over by wise
Philosopher Kings.
3.3.4 Aristotle
Aristotle was the third in the main trio of classical philosophers. He was Plato’s
student. He created an even more comprehensive system of philosophy than his
master Plato. His philosophical works span across Ethics, Aesthetics,
Metaphysics, Logic Politics and Science, and his work influenced almost all later
philosophical thinking, particularly those of the medieval period. Aristotle was
engaged in a system of logic called Deductive Logic, with its emphasis on
syllogism. Syllogism is a system of logic where a conclusion, or synthesis, is
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inferred from two other premises, the thesis and antithesis. This system of logic
remained the dominant form of Logic until the 19th Century. Unlike Plato, Aristotle
held that Form and Matter cannot be separated, and cannot exist apart from each
other. Although, he too believed in a kind of Eudemonism, Aristotle saw Ethics as
a very complex concept and that human beings cannot always control our own
moral environment. He believed that happiness could best be achieved by living a
balanced life and avoiding excess by pursuing a golden mean in everything. This
position is like his formula for political stability through steering a middle course
between tyranny and democracy.
It should be noted here that in the philosophical history of Ancient Greece, there
were several other schools or movements that also held sway, in addition to
Platonism and Aristotelianism. These movements or schools are:
• Sophism: - This group held a relativistic view on knowledge. In other words,
they believe that there is no absolute truth and two points of view can be
acceptable at the same time. Generally, they hold skeptical views on truth
and morality (although, over time, Sophism came to denote a class of
intellectuals who taught courses in rhetoric and "excellence" or "virtue" for
money). Prominent members of this movement are Protagoras and
Gorgias.
• Cynicism: - This group rejected all conventional desires for health, wealth,
power and fame, and advocated a life free from all possessions and
property as the way to achieving Virtue (a life best exemplified by its most
famous proponent, Diagenes).
• Epicureanism :- This group was named after its founder Epicurus, whose
main goal was to attain happiness and tranquility through leading a simple,
moderate life, the cultivation of friendships and the limiting of desires (quite
contrary to the common perception of the word "epicurean").
• Hedonism:- The Hedonists are of the view that pleasure is the most
important pursuit of mankind, and that we should always act so as to
maximize our own pleasure.
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clear judgment and inner calm and the ultimate goal of freedom from
suffering.
4.0 Conclusion
From the above, it is obvious that what started ordinarily as mere idea in the Pre-
Socratic era has at the time of Aristotle become a discipline of inquiry that borders
on human being, his existence and the nature of the cosmos with various ideas
developed by individual philosophers and movements.
5.0 Summary
To recap what you have learned in this unit, click on the video below or copy the
link and paste on a web browser. The video is a summary of what you have read
in this unit. You could also click on the audio version and listen. You can also
download them and play offline.
Video https://youtu.be/G4FGP3u3SQE
Audio
Stumpf, S.E Philosophy, History and Problems, 2nd edition London: McGraw-Hill
Book Company 1975
Ganeri, Jonardon; The Lost Age of Reason Philosophy In Early Modern India
1450–1700, Oxford: Oxford University. press.
Edwards, Paul, ed. (1967). The Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Macmillan & Free
Press.
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Honderich, T., (ed.) The Oxford Companion to Philosophy. Oxford University
Press. 1995
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Unit 2: Medieval and Renaissance Age of Philosophy
Contents
I.0 Introduction
2.0 Intended Learning Outcomes (ILOs)
3.0 Main Content
3.1 Some Islamic philosophers of the Medieval Age
3.1.1 Avicenna
3.1.2 Averroes
3.2 Christian philosophers of the Medieval Age
3.2.1 St. Augustine
3.2.2 St. Anslem
3.3 The Renaissance period
4.0 Conclusion
5.0 Summary
6.0 References/Further Reading
1.0 Introduction
This period was around 11th Century, when there was a renewed flowering of
thought, both in Christian Europe and in Muslim and Jewish Middle East. Most of
the philosophers of this time were mainly concerned with proving the existence of
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God and with reconciling Christianity/Islam with the classical philosophy of Greece
(particularly Aristotelianism).
He hailed from Tagaste in North Africa. He was the first philosopher who
introduced the problem of evil in the world of utmost important. To him, since God
created all things and God is infinitely good, how then do we explain the existence
of evil in a world that a good God created? This problem to Augustine possesses
serious problem to the existence of God, who is said to be good, kind, powerful
and the creator of all things. He known for his concept of time, which he believed
to be an elusive concept. Thus, to him although we talk about Past, Present and
Future, neither the past nor the future really exists, for the past is gone and the
future is not yet, and the present is only a passing moment. He is also known for
his idea that the concept of truth and God in some sense are within man, but since
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God is internal He also transcends man. His proof for the existence of God is that
since every effect has a cause, the universe as an effect must have a cause. This
cause must be God. Also, he argued that the universal conviction of mankind that
God exists is proof of God’s existence. If God does not exist hoe did the whole
human race become convinced of his existence.
He is best known as the originator of the Ontological Argument for the existence
of God by abstract reasoning alone. St Anselm is often regarded as the first of the
Scholastics. Another member of the Scholastic is St Thomas Aquinas. He is also
known for his five rational proofs for the existence of God, and his definition of the
cardinal virtues and the theological virtues. He is generally considered the
greatest, and certainly had the greatest influence on the theology of the Catholic
Church. Other important members of the Scholastics included Peter Abelard,
Albertus Magnus, John Duns Scotus and William of Ockham. Each of them
contributed slight variations to the same general beliefs. For instance, Abelard
introduced the doctrine of limbo for unbaptized babies; Scotus rejected the
distinction between essence and existence that Aquinas had insisted on; Ockham
introduced the important methodological principle known as Ockham's Razor, that
one should not multiply arguments beyond the necessary; etc.
It is important to mention here that the revival of classical civilization and learning
in the 15th and 16th Century known as the Renaissance brought the Medieval
period to a close. It was marked by a movement away from religion and medieval
Scholasticism and towards Humanism (the belief that humans can solve their own
problems through reliance on reason and the scientific method) and a new sense
of critical inquiry.
This age is classified as the period of revival of classical civilization and learning,
which occurred in the 15th and 16th Century. It was the age that brought the
medieval period to a close. It was marked by a movement away from religion and
medieval Scholasticism and towards Humanism (the belief that humans can solve
their own problems through reliance on reason and the scientific method) and a
new sense of critical inquiry.
Erasmus:- He attacked many of the traditions of the Catholic Church and popular
superstitions, and became the intellectual father of the European Reformation;
Niccolo Machiavelli:- He was known for his acclaimed cynical and devious
Political Philosophy. His political ideas has become notorious and has remained
controversial among scholars.
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Thomas More:- He was a Christian Humanist whose book "Utopia" influenced
generations of politicians and planners and even the early development of Socialist
ideas.
Francis Bacon:- He is an empiricist. His belief is that truth requires evidence from
the real world. His application of inductive reasoning - generalizations based on
individual instances - were both influential in the development of modern scientific
methodology.
4.0 Conclusion
From the above discussion, it could be said that in the Middle age, philosophy was
made to be subservient to religion. The philosophers of the age were
predominantly religious fathers who employed philosophy to teach religious
doctrine. However, the renaissance philosopher was those who delivered
philosophy from the aprons of the religious father to which it was tied. They gave
philosophy its freedom and make rationality its basis.
5.0 Summary
To recap what you have learned in this unit, click on the video below or copy the
link and paste on a web browser. The video is a summary of what you have read
in this unit. You could also click on the audio version and listen. You can also
download them and play offline.
Video https://youtu.be/gCaoeK6p9vY
Audio
Stumpf S.E., Philosophy, History and Problems, 2nd edition London: McGraw-Hill
Book Company 1975
Ganeri, Jonardon; The Lost Age of Reason Philosophy In Early Modern India
1450–1700, Oxford: Oxford University. press.
Edwards, Paul, ed. (1967). The Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Macmillan & Free
Press.
13
Schmitt, C. B.; Skinner, Quentin, (eds.) The Cambridge History of Renaissance
Philosophy. Cambridge University Press. 1988.
14
Unit 3: Modern Period of Philosophy
Contents
1.0 Introduction
2.0 Intended Learning Outcomes (ILOs)
3.0 Main Content
3.1 Rationalism
3.1.1 Rene Descartes
3.1.2 Baruch Spinoza
3.1.3 Gottfried Leibniz
3.2 Nicolas Malebranche
3.3 British Empiricism
3.3.1 John Locke
3.3.2 Bishop George Berkeley
3.3.3 David Hume
3.4 Immanuel Kant
3.5 Late Modern Period
4.0 Conclusion
5.0 Summary
6.0 References /Further Reading
1.0 Introduction
Roughly speaking, the Age of Reason was in the 17th Century and the Age of
Enlightenment was in the 18th Century. These ages recorded serious advances
in science, the growth of religious tolerance and the rise of liberalism. These ages
marked the real beginnings of modern philosophy. In large part, the period can be
seen as an ongoing battle between two opposing doctrines, Rationalism- which
is the belief that all knowledge arises from intellectual and deductive reason, rather
than from the senses; and Empiricism, which represent the belief that the origin
of all knowledge is sense experience.
• Identify the various philosophical schools that emanated in the modern age
• Differentiate the philosophical believe and practices of these schools
• Explain the level of growth or advancement that philosophy has made
• Discuss the philosophical tenets of this period
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3.0 Main Contents
3.1 Rationalism
We must note here that the revolution that took place in philosophical thought in
these two ages was sparked by the French philosopher and mathematician René
Descartes. He was the first figure in the loose movement known as Rationalism,
and much of subsequent Western philosophy can be seen as a response to his
ideas. His method was known as methodological skepticism and its aim was to
dispel Skepticism and arrive at certain knowledge. This method was to remove
everything about which there could be even a suspicion of doubt (including the
unreliable senses, even his own body which could be merely an illusion) to arrive
at the single indubitable principle that he possessed consciousness and was able
to think ("I think, therefore I am" “Cogito ergo Sum”). He then argued that our
perception of the world around us must be created for us by God. He saw the
human body as a kind of machine that follows the mechanical laws of physics,
while the mind or what he called consciousness was a quite separate entity, not
subject to the laws of physics, which is only able to influence the body and deal
with the outside world by a kind of mysterious two-way interaction. This idea,
known as Dualism (or, more specifically, Cartesian Dualism), set the agenda for
later philosophical discussion of the "mind-body problem". Despite Descartes'
innovation and boldness, he was a product of his times and never abandoned the
traditional idea of a God, which he saw as the one true substance from which
everything else was made.
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(and, anyway, in an ordered deterministic world, the very concepts of Good and
Evil can have little or no absolute meaning).
He argued that all of our ideas, whether simple or complex, are ultimately derived
from experience, so that the knowledge of which we are capable is therefore
severely limited both in its scope and in its certainty. His idea represents a kind of
modified Skepticism. He believed that the real inner natures of things derive from
what he called their primary qualities which we can never experience and so never
know. Locke, like Avicenna before him, believed that the mind was a tabula rasa
(or blank slate) and that people are born without innate ideas, although he did
believe that humans have absolute natural rights which are inherent in the nature
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of Ethics. Along with Thomas Hobbes and Jean Jack Rousseau, he was one of the
originators of Social Contract Theory, which formed the theoretical underpinning
for democracy, republicanism, Liberalism and Libertarianism, and his political
views influenced both the American and French Revolutions.
The second of the British Empiricists chronologically was Bishop George Berkeley,
although his empiricism was of a more radical kind, mixed with a twist of Idealism.
Using cogent arguments, he developed the rather counter-intuitive system known
as Immaterialism (or sometimes as Subjective Idealism), which held that
underlying reality consists exclusively of minds and their ideas, and that individuals
can only directly know these ideas or perceptions (although not the objects
themselves) through experience. Thus, according to Berkeley's theory, an object
only really exists if someone is there to see or sense it ("to be is to be perceived"),
although, he added, the infinite mind of God perceives everything all the time, and
so in this respect the objects continue to exist.
David Hume was the third, and perhaps greatest, of the movement. He believed
strongly that only experience and observation should be the foundations of any
logical argument. Hume argued that, although we may form beliefs and make
inductive inferences about things outside our experience (by means of instinct,
imagination and custom), they cannot be conclusively established by reason and
we should not make any claims to certain knowledge about them. Although, he
never openly declared himself an atheist, he found the idea of a God effectively
nonsensical, given that there is no way of arriving at the idea through sensory data.
He attacked many of the basic assumptions of religion and gave many of the
classic criticisms of some of the arguments for the existence of God (particularly
the teleological argument). In his Political Philosophy, Hume stressed the
importance of moderation, and his work contains elements of both Conservatism
and Liberalism.
Aside the above discussed philosophers, there were some other "non-aligned"
philosophers of the period and many of were most active in the area of Political
Philosophy. Some of them and ideas of their philosophical discussion are
mentioned below.
• Thomas Hobbes, who described in his famous book "Leviathan" how the
natural state of mankind was brute-like and poor, and how the modern state
was a kind of "social contract" (Contractarianism) whereby individuals
deliberately give up their natural rights for the sake of protection by the state
(accepting, according to Hobbes, any abuses of power as the price of
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peace, which some have seen as a justification for authoritarianism and
even Totalitarianism);
• Blaise Pascal, a confirmed Fideist (the view that religious belief depends
wholly on faith or revelation, rather than reason, intellect or natural theology)
who opposed both Rationalism and Empiricism as being insufficient for
determining major truths;
• Voltaire, an indefatigable fighter for social reform throughout his life, but
wholly cynical of most philosophies of the day, from Leibniz’s optimism to
Pascal's pessimism, and from Catholic dogma to French political
institutions;
He was a German philosopher who appeared towards the end of the Age of
Enlightenment. Kant made another paradigm shift as important as that which was
made by Descartes some years earlier, and in many ways, this marks the shift to
Modern philosophy. He sought to move philosophy beyond the debate between
Rationalism and Empiricism and he attempted to combine those two apparently
contradictory doctrines into one overarching system. A whole movement called
Kantianism developed in the wake of his work, and most of the subsequent history
of philosophy can be seen as responses, in one way or another, to his ideas.
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everyone in a similar situation”. This theory is also interpreted as Moral
Universalism and that we should treat other individuals as ends in themselves,
not as mere means, which means Moral Absolutism, even if that means
sacrificing the greater good. To Kant, any attempts to prove God's existence are
just a waste of time, because our concepts only work properly in the empirical
world (which God is above and beyond), although he also argued that it was not
irrational to believe in something that clearly cannot be proven either way.
Let it be stated here also, that the Modern period produced German Idealist
philosophers and Romanticism Movements. Thus, philosophers like Arthur
Schopenhauer whose philosophy was considered very singular and a product of
the age. He was a thorough-going pessimist who believed that the "will-to-life" (the
drive to survive and to reproduce) was the underlying driving force of the world,
and that the pursuit of happiness, love and intellectual satisfaction was very much
secondary and essentially futile. He saw art (and other artistic, moral and ascetic
forms of awareness) as the only way to overcome the fundamentally frustration-
filled and painful human condition.
The greatest and most influential of the German Idealists was Georg Hegel.
Although, his works have a reputation for abstractness and difficulty, however, he
is often considered the summit of early 19th Century German thought, and his
influence was profound. He extended Aristotle's process of dialectic (resolving a
thesis and its opposing antithesis into a synthesis) to apply to the real world -
including the whole of history - in an on-going process of conflict resolution towards
what he called the Absolute Idea. However, he stressed that what is really
changing in this process is the underlying "Geist" (mind, spirit, soul), and he saw
each person's individual consciousness as being part of an Absolute Mind, which
is sometimes referred to as Absolute Idealism.
Another important figure of this period was Karl Marx who was strongly influenced
by Hegel's dialectical method and his analysis of history. His Marxist theory
including the concepts of historical materialism, class struggle, the labour theory
of value, the bourgeoisie, etc., which he developed with his friend Friedrich
Engels as a reaction against the rampant Capitalism of 19th Century Europe,
provided the intellectual base for later radical and revolutionary Socialism and
Communism.
4.0 Conclusion
The general discussion of philosophy in this age was the focus on human survival
as well as the composition of man. It also examined the nature of the human
society as well as the history of human kind.
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5.0 Summary
To recap what you have learned in this unit, click on the video below or copy the
link and paste on a web browser. The video is a summary of what you have read
in this unit. You could also click on the audio version and listen. You can also
download them and play offline.
Video https://youtu.be/3K4TXKVEIIY
Audio
6.0 References/Further Readings
Stumpf S.E, Philosophy, History and Problems, 2nd edition London: McGraw-Hill
Book Company 1975
Ganeri, Jonardon; The Lost Age of Reason Philosophy In Early Modern India
1450–1700, Oxford: Oxford University. press.
Edwards, Paul, ed. (1967). The Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Macmillan & Free
Press.
21
Unit 4: Philosophical Movements in The Contemporary Period
Contents
1.0 Introduction
2.0 Intended Learning Outcomes (ILOs)
3.0 Main Content
3.1 Utilitarianism
3.2 Pragmatism
3.3 Logical Positivism
3.4 Analytic Philosophy
3.5 Continental Philosophy
3.5.1 Phenomenology
3.5.2 Existentialism
4.0 Conclusion
5.0 Summary
6.0 References/Further Reading.
1.0 Introduction
In this unit, you are going to learn about the various philosophical ideas in the
contemporary time. We shall be talking about Pragmatism, Logical Positivism and
the two philosophical movement trending in the contemporary age, which are
Analytic and Continental philosophy.
3.1 Utilitarianism
In England, the Contemporary age began in the 19th Century. It recorded a very
different kind of philosophy, which grew out of the British Empiricist tradition of the
previous century. One of such philosophy is the Utilitarianism movement. It was
founded by the social reformer, Jeremy Bentham and was popularized by his even
more radical protegé John Stuart Mill. The idea of Utilitarianism is a type of
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Consequentialism. It is kind of approach to Ethics that stresses an action's
outcome or the consequence of an action. It holds that the right action is that which
would cause "the greatest happiness of the greatest number". This theory was
refined by Mill to stress the quality not just the quantity of happiness, and
intellectual and moral pleasures over more physical forms. He counselled that
coercion in society is only justifiable either to defend ourselves or to defend others
from harm (the "harm principle").
3.2 Pragmatism
European philosophy was not limited to the German Idealists in the Contemporary
period. There was the French sociologist and philosopher Auguste Comte who
founded the influential Positivism movement around the belief that the only
authentic knowledge was scientific knowledge, based on actual sense experience
and strict application of the scientific method. Comte saw this as the final phase in
the evolution of humanity, and even constructed a non-theistic, pseudo-mystical
"positive religion" around the idea.
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"Vienna Circle" in the early 20th Century. The members of this group include the
following philosophers among others: Mauritz Schlick, Otto Neurath, Hans
Hahn, Rudolf Carnap and Ludwig Wittgenstein whose work Tractatus,
published in 1921, was a text of great importance for the group. Tractatus was the
picture theory of meaning, which asserted that ‘thoughts’, as expressed in
language, picture the facts of the world, and that the structure of language is also
determined by the structure of reality. In the 1930s, A.J Ayer was largely
responsible for the spread of this philosophical movement to Britain, even as its
influence was already waning in Europe.
20th Century philosophy was dominated to a great extent by the rivalry between
these two philosophical traditions; Analytic Philosophy, which simply express the
mindset that philosophy should apply ‘logical techniques’ and be consistent with
modern science; and Continental Philosophy which, in very general terms,
rejects Scientism and tend towards Historicism.
An important idea that influenced the Analytic Philosophy tradition was the
Logicism, which was developed during the late 19th Century by Gottlob Frege.
Logicism attempt to show that some, or even all, of mathematics can be reduced
to Logic. Frege’s work revolutionized modern mathematical Logic. This idea was
championed by Bertrand Russell and Alfred North Whitehead in the early 20th
Century. They both wrote a book titled Principia Mathematica, a ground-breaking
and monumental book that was particularly important milestone.
Both Russell and Whitehead went on to develop other philosophies. Russell's work
was mainly in Philosophy of Language and the theory of Logical Atomism.
Whitehead developed a metaphysical approach known as Process Philosophy,
which posited ever-changing subjective forms to complement Plato's eternal
forms.
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The work inspired the movement away from Ethical Naturalism (the belief that
there exist moral properties, which we can know empirically, and that can be
reduced to entirely non-ethical or natural properties, such as needs, wants or
pleasures) and towards Ethical Non-Naturalism (the belief that there are no such
moral properties). He pointed out that the term "good", for instance, is in fact
indefinable because it lacks natural properties in the way that the terms "blue",
"smooth", etc, have them.
3.4.2.1 Phenomenology
On the Continental Philosophy side, an important figure in the early 20th Century
was the German Edmund Husserl. He was the founder of Phenomenology a great
and very influential movement of the Century. Husserl developed the idea, parts
of which date back to Descartes and even Plato, that what we call reality really
consists of objects and events (phenomena) as they are perceived or understood
in the human consciousness, and not of anything independent of human
consciousness (which may or may not exist). Thus, we can effectively, ignore
sensory data, and deal only with the "intentional content" that is, the mind's built-
in mental description of external reality, which allows us to perceive aspects of the
real world outside.
3.4.2.2 Existentialism
Jean-Paul Sartre, along with his French contemporaries, Albert Camus, Maurice
Merleau-Ponty and Simone de Beauvoir was considered the main figurehead of
the Existentialist movement. Sartre, a confirmed Atheist and a committed Marxist
and Communist for most of his life, adapted and extended the work of Kierkegaard,
Nietzsche, Husserl and Heidegger, and concluded that "existence is prior to
essence". This is because of his believe that humans are thrust into an unfeeling,
godless universe against our will, and that we must then establish meaning for our
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lives by what we do and how we act. To Sartre, we always have choices (and
therefore freedom) and that, while this freedom is empowering, it also brings with
it moral responsibility and an existential dread (or "angst"). According to Sartre,
genuine human dignity can only be achieved by our active acceptance of this angst
and despair.
Michel Foucault the French radical philosopher has been associated with all of
these movements. Much of his work are on language and, among other things, he
has looked at how certain underlying conditions of truth have constituted what was
acceptable at different times in history, and how the body and sexuality are cultural
constructs rather than natural phenomena. Although sometimes criticized for his
lax standards of scholarship, his ideas are nevertheless frequently cited in a wide
variety of different disciplines.
Last but not the list that should also be mentioned is Deconstructionism (often
called just Deconstruction). This is a method that focuses on literary criticism that
questions traditional assumptions about certainty, identity and truth, and looks for
the underlying assumptions (both unspoken and implicit), as well as the ideas and
frameworks, that form the basis for thought and belief. The method was developed
by the Frenchman Jacques Derrida (who is also credited as a major figure in Post-
Structuralism). His work is highly cerebral and self-consciously "difficult", and he
has been repeatedly accused of pseudo-philosophy and sophistry.
4.0 Conclusion
The unit examined some of the most influential philosophical groups or movement
that dominates the philosophical discourse in the 19th and 20th century. It was
pointed out that most of these movements were from but not so restricted to
America and England, where philosophical traditions like Analytic and continental
philosophy, Pragmatism, Logical positivism and many more are thriving. But we
should be quick to say that in the contemporary time, African Philosophy has also
come of age. But, our discussion of African philosophy shall be reserved for the
next unit.
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5.0 Summary
To recap what you have learned in this unit, click on the video below or copy the
link and paste on a web browser. The video is a summary of what you have read
in this unit. You could also click on the audio version and listen. You can also
download them and play offline.
Video https://youtu.be/mlXTa5PY36I
Audio
Stumpf, S.E., Philosophy, History and Problems, 2nd edition London: McGraw-Hill
Book Company 1975
Ganeri, Jonardon; The Lost Age of Reason Philosophy In Early Modern India
1450–1700, Oxford: Oxford University, Press.
Edwards, Paul, ed. (1967). The Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Macmillan & Free
Press.
27
Rutherford, Donald The Cambridge Companion to Early Modern Philosophy.
Cambridge: University Press. 2006.
28
Unit 5: The Idea of African Philosophy
Contents
1.0 Introduction
2.0 Intended Learning Outcomes (ILOs)
3.0 Main Contents
3.1 The Meaning of African Philosophy
3.2 The Nature of African Philosophy
3.3 Currents in African Philosophy
3.3.1 Ethno-Philosophy
3.3.2 Sage Philosophy
3.3.3 Professional Philosophy
3.3.4 Nationalist and Ideological Philosophy
3.3.5 Hermeneutic Philosophy
3.3.6 Literary and Artistic Philosophy
3.3.7 The Historical Trends
4.0 Conclusion
5.0 Summary
6.0 References/Further Reading
1.0 Introduction
The search for African philosophy is dominated by the need for a new identity
authentic to Africans and distinct from those imposed by western culture and
tradition. Before now the beliefs of the Western philosophers was that two species
of human beings exist. On one hand were the Westerners, who are seen and are
believed to be the only set of human beings who could reason. And on the other
side were the Africans, who lacks ideas and whom rational thought was considered
impossible. For instance, some Western scholars like Hegel believed that Africans
are people against which all reason could be contrasted, some believe even if
Africans can reason, it is not as developed as what exists in the Western society.
Since Africans are a special specie of human race, Africans cannot philosophize,
understand or demonstrate any form of philosophical enterprise. This Unit is
therefore an examination of these Western opinion on African philosophy with a
view to show the meaning of African philosophy.
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3.0 Main Content
First begin by asking yourself some questions such as; were our forbearers’ non-
thinking creatures? Are we still thinking? Do we have a school of thought that
equips our policy makers, guides our scholars and provide guidance for our
development? Or are we just living on borrowed thought and precepts? All these
questions arouse as a result of the perception of the Westerners about us and their
declaration of our lack of philosophical truth like them.
You need to know that the Western civilization is based on the philosophy of the
West- this philosophy supposedly emanates from Greece specifically Athens: men
like Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, Pericles, Cicero, Archimedes and modern ones like
Eistein, Heideggar, Hobbes etc. have contributed not only to the philosophical
thought of the west, but laid the foundation of her science, technology and art.
These thinkers provided valuable answers to issues wide ranging from morality,
government, politics, religion and war. In universities across Nigeria, students are
taught Western Philosophy, but what is fundamentally lacking is an understanding
of their own philosophy. But do we Africans have philosophy? If we do, what is our
philosophy, how do we describe or define African philosophy.
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thinking was noted especially during the Pre-Socratic period of the development
of philosophy.
31
qualifies: the content of the philosophy and the distinctive methods employed, or
the identities of the philosophers. On the former view, philosophy counts as African
if it involves African themes such as perceptions of time, personhood, space and
other subjects, or uses methods that are defined as distinctively African.2 In the
latter view, African philosophy is any philosophy produced by Africans or by people
of African descent, and others engaged in critiques or analysis of their works.
Ethno-philosophy has been used to record the beliefs found in African cultures.
Such an approach treats African philosophy as consisting in a set of shared beliefs,
values, categories, and assumptions that are implicit in the language, practices,
and beliefs of African cultures; in short, the uniquely African word view. As such, it
is seen as an item of communal property rather than an activity for the individual.
One proponent of this form, Placide Tempels, argued in The Bantu Philosophy that
the metaphysical categories of the Bantu people are reflected in their linguistic
categories. According to this view, African philosophy can be best understood as
springing from the fundamental assumptions about reality reflected in the
languages of Africa.
Another example of this sort of approach is the work of E. J. Algoa a Nigerian who
argues for the existence of an African Philosophy of History stemming from
traditional proverbs from the Niger Delta in his paper "An African Philosophy of
History in the Oral Tradition." Algoa (Babalola: 1998) argues that in African
philosophy, age is seen as an important factor in gaining wisdom and interpreting
the past. In support of this view, he cites proverbs such as "More days, more
wisdom", and "What an old man sees seated, a youth does not see standing."
Truth is seen as eternal and unchanging ("Truth never rots"), but people are
subject to error ("Even a four-legged horse stumbles and falls"). It is dangerous to
judge by appearances ("A large eye does not mean keen vision"), but first-hand
observation can be trusted ("He who sees does not err"). The past is not seen as
fundamentally different from the present, but all history is contemporary history ("A
storyteller does not tell of a different season"). The future remains beyond
knowledge ("Even a bird with a long neck cannot see the future"). Nevertheless, it
is said, "God will outlive eternity." History is seen as vitally important ("One ignorant
of his origin is nonhuman"), and historians (known as "sons of the soil") are highly
revered ("The son of the soil has the python's keen eyes").
In the same, there are several Yoruba proverbs that points to Metaphysics,
Epistemology, Ethics, and so on. For instance, (prostration is not good conduct;
one’s intention exists in the mind already), which points to appearance and reality.
(It is not understanding the Ifa message that makes one to look up, since the Ifa is
not on the ceiling), this proverb emphasis the distinction between opinion and
32
knowledge. There is the ethical proverb that emphasis sincerity and the need to
keep promise made - (He who borrows one thousand, two hundred and refuses to
pay has blocked one thousand, four hundred). However, these arguments must be
taken with a grain of cultural relativism, as there are so many cultures in Africa,
with patriarchies, matriarchies, monotheists and traditional religionists among the
population, and as such the attitudes of the two-society mentioned above cannot
be taken to represent the whole of Africa.
Leopold Sedar Senghor also embraced this approach. His view in support of his
approach is embodied in his concept Negritude. In the Negritude, he argued that
the distinctly African approach to reality is based on emotion rather than logic,
works itself out in participation rather than analysis, and manifests itself through
the arts rather than the sciences. Other African philosophers who upholds the
ethno-philosophy approach are John Mbiti, Cheikh Anta Diop and Mubabinge
Bilolo, etc.
It is important to know that this approach has been criticised. The critics of this
approach argue that the actual philosophical work in producing a coherent
philosophical position is being done by the academic philosopher, and that the
sayings of the same culture can be selected from and organised in many ways to
produce very different, often contradictory systems of thought (Odimegwu etal’:
2009).
This approach wants whatever that will go by the name African philosophy must
meet certain criteria which other philosophies like Western, Chines, Indian, etc.
already have. One of such criteria is not to consider it as a communal enterprise
but rather it should be seen as the work of an individual. This may explain why
Odera Oruka the contended that philosophy is never a community patrimony
which, as such, belonged to all members of the society. Philosophy as far as this
33
approach is concerned is an individual enterprise. It is the conscious effort of an
individual philosopher as he contemplates the universe and its reality. Thus, we
can speak of individual philosophy as we speak of the philosophy of Plato,
Aristotle, Hegels, etc.
One of the criticisms of this approach is that not all reflection and questioning is
philosophical; besides, if African philosophy were to be defined purely in terms of
philosophic sagacity, then the thoughts of the sages could not be African
philosophy, for they did not record them from other sages. Critics argued further
that the problem with both ethno-philosophy and philosophical sagacity is that
there is surely an important distinction between philosophy and the history of ideas,
although other philosophers consider the two topics to be remarkably similar
(Okolo: 1990). The argument is that no matter how interesting the beliefs of a
people such as the Akan or the Yoruba may be to the philosopher, they remain
beliefs, not philosophy. To call them philosophy is to use a secondary sense of
that term, such as in "my philosophy is live and let live.
It is emphasized by a member of the group that it is the philosophical texts, that is,
writings of these professionally trained philosophers that can only qualify as African
philosophy. ‘African philosophy equals African literature. That is, the whole of
philosophical texts produced by Africans’.
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3.3.5 The Hermeneutic Philosophy
Literary and Artistic philosophers recognized that there are some African literary
scholars whose writings reflects philosophical issues in their essays. These
scholars are seen to be critical of the African condition in their works and they try
to point out what existence entails in an ideal African situation. Scholars like
Achebe, Soyinka, Okot p’iBtek and others are therefore recognized as been
philosophical.
This idea was initiated by Oguejiofor (2000) he contends that the idea of
philosophy has been in existence in Africa even before the development of the
Greek philosophy. The argument then is that it is the African philosophy, through
the Egyptian connection, that influenced the emergence of philosophy in Greece.
The implication of this argument therefore, is that there would not have been what
is called Geek philosophy today if African philosophy did not exist. Greek
philosophy to them is nothing but child of Egyptian philosophy which is African.
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4.0 Conclusion
The contention of whether there is African philosophy or not has been laid to rest
given the various African philosophers’ views that have expound in this unit.
Although, some positions may be contestable, however given the level of the
growth of African philosophy and its waves in the contemporary time the
philosophy is assuming the same status with the western philosophy.
5.0 Summary
To recap what you have learned in this unit, click on the video below or copy the
link and paste on a web browser. The video is a summary of what you have read
in this unit. You could also click on the audio version and listen. You can also
download them and play offline.
Video https://youtu.be/deQ-k-zd7zg
Audio
Okolo, C.B. Problems of African Philosophy and One Other Essay, Enugu: Cecta,
1990
Olabiyi Babalola Yai, Guest Editor: “Religion and Philosophy in Africa” African
Studies Quarterly, Volume 1, Issue 4 (1998)
36
Discussion Forum
State five parables in your context and give the philosophical analysis. Post on
the forum page.
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