•  125
    Hegel's Historical Denialism and Epistemic Eclipse in African Philosophy
    Journal of Contemporary African Philosophy 4 (2): 36-45. 2023.
    African philosophy remains bedeviled by relics of Hegel’s racist chants against the rationality of Africans, and this situation deserves revisitation and reevaluation for reconstructive purposes. In this paper, I implicate Hegel’s concatenations as necessitating the reactive fervour within which a significant portion of the themes, thesis, and content of African philosophy is locked. This influence, which partially eclipses African philosophy, I term historical denialism. In an attempt to repudi…Read more
  •  174
    African Jurisprudence as Historical Co-extension of Diffused Legal Theories
    Thought and Practice: A Journal of the Philosophical Association of Kenya 8 (1): 51-68. 2022.
    African jurisprudence, like African philosophy, continues to be hotly debated. This article contends that the debate straddles the uniqueness claim which either emphasises the existence or possibility of a peculiar legal framework on the continent, and a historical co-extensional position reiterating that African jurisprudence is a continuum of other legal traditions. The article argues that there is no uniquely African jurisprudence, and that what obtains within the structures of jurisprudence …Read more