An Investigation of Obligatory Anthropoholism as Plausible African Environmental Ethics

An Investigation of Obligatory Anthropoholism as Plausible African Environmental Ethics

African ontological discourse revolves around a few principles, the interrelatedness of being, what is variously interpreted as communalism, ubuntu, Holism, communitarianism etc. This is the view that every being in the world, animate and inanimate are interconnected into a whole. This makes it possible for African environmental attitude to claim to be holistic. Since we are one, we care for each other, humans care for animals, plants, and mountains not because of what to gain from them but because we are the same and harming the river is same as harming oneself. The weakness of seeing African environmental ethics as only holistic is that it is not African enough as the paper will argue. The second principle in African ontological discourse is the human being. This principle has made scholars like Callicott and even some African scholars to describe African environmental ethics as anthropocentric. The paper also argues that branding African environmental ethics anthropocentric is not African enough. This is because Africans live in an interconnected world, comprising both the living, the dead and nature. Humans are only one privileged part of the whole and this is because of her obligatory role to nature and the world as a result of her capabilities. Through the method of analysis, the paper argues that a plausible African environmental ethics will be one that will blend the holistic nature of the African ontology and its pride of place given to humans. It will be discovered that obligatory anthropoholism can comfortably blend these two principles without necessarily being anthropocentric.

___

  • [1] Hargrove, E.C. Foundation of Environmental Ethics. New Jersey: Prentice- Hale. Inc 1989) p. 15.
  • [2] John O Donhue. New Wine and Old Bottles: A study of the Concepts of Traditional Africa and their Continuing Influence Today. (Sweden: Reprocentralen HSC. Upsala University 1994) p. 5
  • [3] Tempels Placid. Bantu Philosophy, (Presence African; Paris Paperback, 1968) p. 30
  • [4] John Donhue:1994. p. 6 John Donhue:1994. p. 6 John Donhue:1994. p. 6
  • [5] Pantaleon Ioegbu. Metaphysics: Kpim of Philosophy. (Owerri: International University Press,1995) p. 315
  • [6] Innocent I. Asouzu. Ibuanyidanda: New Complementary Ontology: Beyond world-Immanentism, Ethnocentric Reduction and Imposition. (Germany: Lit Verlag. Berhir. Transaction pubRamose M.B. “Ecology Through Ubuntu”( Harare; Mond Press, 1994) P.308-309lishers, Rutgers University Press, 2007) p. 117
  • [7] Ibid. p. 120 Ibid. p. 120 Ibid. p. 120 Ibid. p. 120
  • [8] John O. Donhue. New Wine and Old Bottles, A Study of the Traditional Africa and of Their Continuing Influence Today(Sweden, Reprocentralen HSC, Uppsala University,1994) P. 6
  • [9] Godfrey O. Ozumba and Jonathan O. Chimakonam. Njikoka Amaka. Further Discussions on the Philosophy of Integrative Humanism. Vol 2 (Calabar. 3rd Logic Option Publishing 2014) p.v
  • [10] Pantaleon Ioegbu. Metaphysics: Kpim of Philosophy. (Owerri: International University Press,1995) p. 305
  • [11] Ramose M.B. “Ecology Through Ubuntu”( Harare; Mond Press, 1994) P.308-309
  • [12] Asouzu; 2007;32 Asouzu; 2007;32 Asouzu; 2007;32
  • [13] Innocent Asouzu. Ibuanyidanda; New Complementary Ontology, Beyound World immanentism, Ethnocentric Reduction and Impositions. (Zunich; Lit 2007) p 34
  • [14] Thad Metz. “African Theory of Moral Status; A Relational Alternative to Individualism and Holism”; In Robert. F. heeger et al (eds) Ethical Theory and Moral Practice. (Springer Pub. 2012.) P.390
  • [15] Mogobe B. Ramose. African Philosophy through Ubuntu. (Harare: Mont Books, 2002)
  • [16] Godfrey B. Tangwa. ‘Some Reflections on Biomedical annvironmental Ethics’ In Kwasi Wiredu (ed), A Companion to African Philosophy. (Malden: Blackwell Publishing Ltd, 2004) P.388
  • [17] Onora O’Nell. “Environmental Values, Anthropocentrism and Speciesm” Environmental Values6, No 2. 1997: p 127