ABSTRACT

Great achievements in areas such as space conquest and technologies have been reduced to a pale inconsequentiality for the massive majority of the world’s population in the face of slavery, genocide, holocaust, poverty, inequality, social and cognitive apartheid, intergenerational injustice, and the temerity to change nature, among other issues. Painfully all of the sagas are at the very root of modern societal tech advancements. While “the former openly championed the epistemicide, the latter ended up being incapable of interrupting such epistemicide and, in many ways, ended up helping the scientific and social perpetuation of anathema. Moreover, in many ways, specific counter dominant traditions were actually crucial enzymes of the epistemicide as well”. Decolonizing interpretive research dissected by indigenous and subaltern scholars should be seen as an itinerant philosophy of praxis, which consciously assumes that, while Karl Marx was not wrong, the focus should be to transform the world, “to understand is to destroy oneself”.