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  1. Chimakonam’s sense-phenomenalism and the bogey of consciousness.Ada Agada - 2024 - Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religions 13 (1):1-10.
    In the 2019 work “A Sense-Phenomenal Look at the Problem of Personal Identity,” Jonathan O. Chimakonam articulates an intriguing and novel body-only perspective of personal identity that has a direct implication for our understanding of consciousness. In this article, I focus on the aspect of the work that adopts a seemingly eliminativist stance on the hard problem of consciousness. Chimakonam’s version of physicalism rejects the reality of consciousness or experience while accepting that humans have sensations. Having transferred the location of (...)
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  2. Land management and the Bayaa institution: The enduring impact of Kasena-Nankana mortuary practises.Joseph Aketema - 2024 - Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religions 13 (1):11-26.
    The significantly enduring traditional Kasena-Nankana Bayaase or Bayaaro institution is one of the profound cultural institutions that serve its communities' spiritual and mortal needs in diverse ways. A pall-bearer ritually fortified to execute indigenous morturary and burial practices. This ritual, per its very nature and function, may appear unenticing but is indispensable when it comes to preparing the dead for final travel, and the appeasement of Mother Earth. This institution has since not received deeper scholarly attention and is currently facing (...)
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  3. Re-imagining indigenous African epistemological entanglement and resilience adaptation in the Anthropocene.Charles Amo-Agyemang - 2024 - Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religions 13 (1):61-81.
    This paper examines how indigenous African communities have become critical for developing epistemologies of relation and entanglement in the dominant problem of contemporary resilience understandings of adaptation in the Anthropocene imaginary. Grounded in the indigenous African epistemological philosophies, this paper explores critical alternative futural framings that directly oppose the modernist epistemological understandings of resilience imaginaries in the Anthropocene. The analysis presented here is based on understanding indigenous non-modern ways of knowing as key in the context of ecological crisis in the (...)
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  4. Mothers but not wives: The Biakē custom and its implications on the Ogoni contemporary society.Burabari Sunday Deezia - 2024 - Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religions 13 (1):47-60.
    The _Biakē _custom, an ancient practice among the Ogoni indigenous people, refers to a system by which certain girls or women are not allowed to marry, but are legitimately allowed to raise children for their parents or family, because of some peculiar circumstances of the household, thus the idea of ‘mothers but not wives.’ However, the _Biakē _practice has been misconstrued with the malapropism called ‘_Sira_-Custom,’ implying a system in which the first daughters are not given out for marriage. This (...)
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  5. A critique of J.S. Sanni’s argument on the role of religion in promoting silence and extortion in contemporary African (Nigerian) society using the name of God.Anthony Chimankpam Ojimba - 2024 - Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religions 13 (1):27-46.
    This study examines J.S. Sanni’s argument on the role of religion in promoting silence and extortion in contemporary African (Nigerian) society, leveraging on the name of God, with a view to determining the strengths and weaknesses of this argument. Sanni posits that religion (Christianity and Islam) have played crucial roles in promoting silence and extortion in Africa, with particular reference to Nigeria. He argues that the colonial debris of disempowerment, injustices, manipulation and extortion, using the instrumentality of religion, are still (...)
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