•  48
    In this chapter I systematically distinguish a variety of ways to relationalize economics, and focus on a certain approach to relationalizing normative economics in the light of communal values salient in the African philosophical tradition. I start by distinguishing four major ways to relationalize empirical economics, viz., in terms of its ontologies, methods, explanations, and predictions, and also three major ways to relationalize normative economics, in regards to means taken towards ends, …Read more
  •  5
    Reprint of an article first appearing in Philosophical Papers (2017).
  • African Moral Philosophy and Work
    In Julian Jonker & Grant Rozeboom (eds.), Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Work, Oxford University Press. forthcoming.
    One aim of this chapter is to acquaint a reader unfamiliar with African philosophy with some of its more prominent ethical perspectives, especially those pertaining to ubuntu, as they bear on work. However, I undertake this discussion with some sympathy towards these implications, such that another aim is to point out that the prescriptions for the workplace that moral philosophers working in the African tradition have made (or would sensibly make given their more basic commitments) are worth ta…Read more
  •  9
    Afrikali Ubuntu Etiği
    Öncül. 2022.
    Turkish translation by Eren Yildiz of ‘The African Ethic of Ubuntu', which first appeared in the online collection 1000WordPhilosophy
  • Recent Work in African Political Theory
    Journal of International Political Theory. forthcoming.
    In this article I expound and evaluate key ideas from monographs devoted to African political philosophy and published since 2020. The featured titles are __Ubuntu for Warriors__, Justice and Human Rights in the African Imagination, Capitalism and Freedom in African Political Philosophy, African Politics and Ethics, Ludic Ubuntu Ethics: Decolonizing Justice, Deliberative Agency: A Study in Modern African Political Philosophy, and Ubuntu Beyond Identities. Major topics from these works that I tak…Read more
  •  314
    How African Conceptions of God Bear on Life's Meaning
    Religious Studies 59 (2): 340-354. 2023.
    Up to now, a very large majority of work in the religious philosophy of life’s meaning has presumed a conception of God that is Abrahamic. In contrast, in this essay I critically discuss some of the desirable and undesirable facets of Traditional African Religion’s salient conceptions of God as they bear on meaning in life. Given an interest in a maximally meaningful life, and supposing meaning would come from fulfiling God’s purpose for us, would it be reasonable to prefer God as characteristic…Read more
  •  12
    Defending a Communal Account of Human Dignity
    In Motsamai Molefe & Christopher Allsobrook (eds.), Human Dignity in African Thought, Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 23-42. 2023.
    For more than ten years, I have advanced a conception of human dignity informed by ideas about community salient in the African philosophical tradition. According to it, an individual has a dignity if she is by her nature able to commune with others and to be communed with by them. I have argued that this conception of dignity grounded on our communal nature not only helps to make good foundational sense of many characteristically African moral prescriptions, but also constitutes a strong rival …Read more
  •  107
    How to Do African Ethics: Reply to Six Critics
    African Philosophical Inquiry 11 123-150. 2023.
    This essay is a lengthy response to six contributors to a special issue edited by Adeshina Afolayan and devoted to critical discussions of _A Relational Moral Theory: African Ethics in and Beyond the Continent_. Key topics include: the proper role of metaphysics when doing moral philosophy; the appropriate aims of moral philosophy in the light of relational values and properties; the ir/relevance of imperceptible agents for an African ethic; the un/attractiveness of the principle that one morall…Read more
  •  31
    Mildly revised reprint of a 2012 overview of recent work on anti-natalism reprinted in a collection devoted to the topic.
  •  29
    Reprint of a 2011 article about David Benatar's approach to anti-natalism in a collection of essays devoted to his and other forms of anti-natalism.
  •  153
    Der junge Marx im Licht einer afrikanischen Ethik: Zwei Ansichten der Selbstverwirklichung
    Polylog: Zeitschrift Für Interkulturelles Philosophieren 47 69-93. 2022.
    German translation by Namita Herzl and Juri Wald of ‘The Young Marx and an African Ethic: Two Views of Self-realization’.
  • An idea salient in the African and East Asian philosophical traditions is that the right sort of socio-political interaction would be similar to the intuitive ways that family members ought to relate to each other. Applying this perspective to economic and ecological inequalities, I articulate some principles implicit in healthy familial relationships, show what they entail for certain aspects of distributive justice at the national level, and contend that the implications are plausible relative…Read more
  •  15
    When it comes to how to hold people responsible for wrongdoing, much of the African philosophical tradition focuses on reconciliation as a final aim. This essay expounds an interpretation of reconciliation meant to have broad appeal, and then draws out its implications for responsibility in respect to three matters. First, when it comes to criminal justice, prizing reconciliation entails that offenders should be held responsible to “clean up their own mess,” i.e., to reform their characters and …Read more
  •  77
    Contemporary Anti-Natalism (edited book)
    Routledge. 2023.
    Given the pain, discomfort, anxiety, heartbreak, and boredom that most humans experience in their lives, is it morally permissible to create them? Some philosophers lately have answered ‘No’, contending that it is wrong to create a new human life when one could avoid doing so, because it would be bad for the one created. This view is known as ‘anti-natalism’. Some contributors to this volume argue that anti-natalism is true because: agents have a prima facie duty to prevent suffering; it is immo…Read more
  •  161
    The Abrahamic faiths of Christianity, Judaism, and Islam are typically recognized as the world’s major monotheistic religions. However, African Traditional Religion is, despite often including lesser spirits and gods, a monotheistic religion with numerous adherents in sub-Saharan Africa; it includes the idea of a single most powerful God responsible for the creation and sustenance of everything else. This Element focuses on drawing attention to this major world religion that has been much neglec…Read more
  • The Young Marx and an African Ethic: Two Relational Views of Self-realization
    In Ken Cheng & Jun-Hyeok Kwak (eds.), Relationality East and West (tentative title), Routledge. forthcoming.
    Karl Marx's normative views have routinely been contrasted with moral-political theories such as utilitarianism and Rawlsian justice. They have not been systematically contrasted with characteristically African, and specifically communal, values, with post-independence African leaders such as Nyerere and Nkrumah instead having emphasized the similarities. In this article, a work of analytic philosophy, I sketch the essentials of Marx’s approach to the human good, especially his early writings on…Read more
  •  5
    Two Conceptions of African Ethics
    Quest - and African Journal of Philosophy 25 (1-2): 141-162. 2011.
  •  284
    The Meanings of God: Reply to Four Critics
    International Journal of Philosophy and Theology 82 (4-5): 366-374. 2021.
    In this article, I briefly reply to four critics who critically engage with my book God, Soul and the Meaning of Life in a special issue of the International Journal of Philosophy and Theology. I view them mainly as addressing the ‘meaning’ of God in three distinct senses, namely, in terms of how best to understand the word ‘God’ and related terms such as ‘the spiritual’, whether God is central to what gives our lives a particular sort of final value, and how beliefs about God might be central t…Read more
  •  217
    Problems of Living Meaningfully in Psychiatry and Philosophy
    Brazilian Journal of Psychiatry 44 (3): 229-230. 2022.
    A brief critical notice of Dan J Stein's new book _Problems of Living: Perspectives from Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Cognitive-Affective Science_.
  •  479
    A Reconciliation Theory of State Punishment: An Alternative to Protection and Retribution
    Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 91 119-139. 2022.
    I propose a theory of punishment that is unfamiliar in the West, according to which the state normally ought to have offenders reform their characters and compensate their victims in ways the offenders find burdensome, thereby disavowing the crime and tending to foster improved relationships between offenders, their victims, and the broader society. I begin by indicating how this theory draws on under-appreciated ideas about reconciliation from the Global South, and especially sub-Saharan Africa…Read more
  •  357
    How Much Punishment Is Deserved? Two Alternatives to Proportionality
    with Mika’il Metz
    Philosophies 7 (2): 1-13. 2022.
    When it comes to the question of how much the state ought to punish a given offender, the standard understanding of the desert theory for centuries has been that it should give him a penalty proportionate to his offense, that is, an amount of punishment that fits the severity of his crime. In this article, part of a special issue on the geometry of desert, we maintain that a desert theorist is not conceptually or otherwise required to hold a proportionality requirement. We show that there is log…Read more
  • Human Rights and African Communitarian Values
    In Jesse Tomalty & Kerri Woods (eds.), Routledge Handbook for the Philosophy of Human Rights, Routledge. forthcoming.
    This chapter demonstrates that the African philosophical tradition offers four interesting ways to broaden global thought about human rights, where all four involve an appeal to the value of community in some way. Firstly, some African philosophers are skeptical about the normative category of human, i.e., individual rights, with some appealing to communal considerations to deny they exist at all and others doing so to argue that they should not play a central role in moral-political thought. Se…Read more
  •  279
    Meaning and Medicine: An Underexplored Bioethical Value
    Ethik in der Medizin 33 (4): 439-453. 2021.
    In this article, part of a special issue on meaning in life and medical ethics, I argue that several issues encountered in a bioethical context are not adequately addressed only with values such as morality and welfare. I maintain, more specifically, that the value of what makes a life meaningful is essential to being able to provide conclusive judgements about which decisions to make. After briefly indicating how meaningfulness differs from rightness and happiness, I point out how it is plausib…Read more
  •  213
    Gratitude for Life-Force in African Philosophy
    In Joshua Harris, Kirk Lougheed & Neal DeRoo (eds.), Philosophical Perspectives on Existential Gratitude: Analytic, Continental, and Religious Approaches, Bloomsbury Academic. pp. 89-107. 2023.
    I begin by constructing a religio-philosophical argument informed by ideas salient in the African tradition for thinking that we should express gratitude to God for having been giving a dignity-conferring life-force, after which I defend the argument from value-theoretic criticisms (I set aside metaphysical issues altogether). For example, I respond to the objections that having an inherent dignity is not a benefit of a sort warranting gratitude and that those with bad lives have no reason to be…Read more
  •  103
    Defending a Relational Account of Moral Status
    In Mbih Jerome Tosam & Erasmus Masitera (eds.), African Agrarian Philosophy, Springer. pp. 105-124. 2024.
    For the more than a decade, I have advanced an account of what makes persons, animals, and other beings entitled to moral treatment for their own sake that is informed by characteristically African ideas about dignity, a great chain of being, and community. Roughly according to this account, a being has a greater moral status, the more it is capable of communing (as a subject) or of us communing with it (as an object). I have mainly argued that this characteristically African and relational appr…Read more