ABSTRACT

Franciscan priest Placide Tempels’s 1946 book, Bantu Philosophy, introduced a new discourse about African thought and beliefs, questioning the universality of Western philosophy and establishing paradigms that continue to dominate discussion of the relationships between Africa and the West today. More than 75 years after the publication of this influential text, this volume brings together a wide range of contributors to examine the legacy and impact of Tempels’s work for the study of African philosophy and religion. Reflecting on whether Bantu Philosophy reinforces conflict or convergence between Africa and the West, and its reception within Africa, scholars from both African and Western institutions provide new perspectives on both Tempels’s ideas and ongoing debates in African philosophy and religion.

chapter |4 pages

Placide Tempels

An Introduction

part 2|29 pages

Bantu Philosophy in an African context

part 3|52 pages

Intercultural Philosophy and Bantu Philosophical Paradigms

chapter 6|26 pages

Tempels and the “Bumuntu Paradigm”

Prolegomenon to an African Philosophy of Dialogue Among Civilizations in the Twenty-first Century

part 4|48 pages

Interdisciplinary Relevance of Tempels's Bantu Philosophy

chapter 8|22 pages

Beyond Bantu Philosophy

The Communal Role for Women in Pre-Colonial Africa

chapter |10 pages

Epilogue

Does Bantu Philosophy reinforce conflict or convergence between African and Western philosophy?