•  8
    Vietnamese translation of _What Makes Life Meaningful? A Debate_, part of the Routledge little debates about big questions series.
  •  14
    Principles for Compensating the Epistemic Injustices of Colonialism
    Philosophical Studies 183 (3): 967-993. 2026.
    I aim to make headway towards understanding how to compensate properly for epistemic injustices committed during large-scale forms of intergroup domination, with my focus being European colonialism in much of Africa and apartheid in South Africa. I point out that there is a wide array of suggestions about how concretely to effect reparations for these injustices in the literature, and seek to discover which (if any) are justified by a plausible theory of compensatory justice. One potential theor…Read more
  • In What Is a Person? Nancy Jecker and Caesar Atuire aim to resolve what they call the “conundrum of personhood,” the fact that many Western philosophers have the intuition that there is a superlative and equal moral worth for at least all living human beings, but that, with the decline of religious approaches positing a soul, Western philosophers have lacked the theoretical resources to account for it. Jecker and Atuire maintain that the intuition can plausibly be accounted for upon drawing on r…Read more
  •  4
    The Meaning of Life
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2007.
  • The Meaningfulness of Groups
    Philosophy and Social Criticism. forthcoming.
    When thinking about life’s meaning as a highly desirable final value, a very large majority of contemporary work in English-speaking philosophy has focused on the life of an individual human person. When thinking about the meaningfulness of the life of such a person, it has been common to maintain that we have in mind a cluster of related properties such as making a difference, achieving a purpose higher than one’s own subjective well-being, making sense, doing something that merits pride or adm…Read more
  •  11
    In her essay, “Global Knowledge Frameworks and the Tasks of Cross-Cultural Philosophy,” Leigh Jenco proposes that certain knowledge frameworks may, in virtue of their accessibility to erstwhile outsiders, be more congenial to the aims of cross-cultural philosophy. Her co-symposiasts use Jenco’s essay to further the discussion on different aspects of this claim. Steve Fuller contests whether postcolonialism is the right lens through which cross-cultural encounters should be studied. David H. Kim …Read more
  •  1765
    How Much Punishment Is Deserved? Two Alternatives to Proportionality
    with Mika’il Metz
    Philosophies 7 (2): 25. 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, we maintain that a desert theorist is not conceptually or otherwise required to hold a proportionality requirement. We show that there is logical space for at least two other, non-proportionat…Read more
  •  335
    Principles for Compensating the Epistemic Injustices of Colonialism
    Philosophical Studies 183 (3): 967-993. 2026.
    I aim to make headway towards understanding how to compensate properly for epistemic injustices committed during large-scale forms of intergroup domination, with my focus being European colonialism in much of Africa and apartheid in South Africa. I point out that there is a wide array of suggestions about how concretely to effect reparations for these injustices in the literature, and seek to discover which (if any) are justified by a plausible theory of compensatory justice. One potential theor…Read more
  • Arabic translation of 'Ubuntu as a Moral Theory and Human Rights in South Africa' undertaken by Prof Ali Elkhateeb.
  •  16
    Baier and Cottingham on the meaning of life
    Disputatio 1 (19): 251-264. 2005.
    I examine two recent books by analytic philosophers that address the underexplored topic of whether the meaning of life depends on the existence of a supernatural realm including God and a soul. John Cottingham’s On the Meaning of Life defends a supernaturalist conception of life’s meaning, whereas Kurt Baier’s Problems of Life and Death defends the opposite, naturalist perspective. I show that their respective arguments are worth serious consideration, indicate some potential weaknesses in them…Read more
  •  58
    In a recent article in this journal, Peter Mwipikeni argues that Thaddeus Metz’s appeal to an African relational ethic to suggest reforms that would promote global economic justice is misguided. According to Mwipikeni, the problem is that Metz’s ideas are offered within the context of a “racialised world order” that is fundamentally and structurally unjust. Without first tearing the current system down, there can be no true economic justice on the African continent, while those benefiting from t…Read more
  •  59
    Meaning in Life
    Oxford University Press UK. 2015.
    What makes a person's life meaningful? Thaddeus Metz argues that no existing theory does full justice to the key requirements of morality, enquiry, and creativity. He offers a new answer to the question: meaning in life is a matter of intelligence contoured toward fundamental conditions of human existence.
  •  20
    Recent work in African ethics (review)
    Journal of Moral Education 39 (3): 381-391. 2010.
  •  36
    The African ethic of Ubuntu/botho: implications for research on morality
    with Joseph B. R. Gaie
    Journal of Moral Education 39 (3): 273-290. 2010.
    In this article we provide a theoretical reconstruction of sub‐Saharan ethics that we argue is a strong competitor to typical Western approaches to morality. According to our African moral theory, actions are right roughly insofar as they are a matter of living harmoniously with others or honouring communal relationships. After spelling out this ethic, we apply it to several issues in both normative and empirical research into morality. With regard to normative research, we compare and contrast …Read more
  •  456
    The Defence and Limits of Consensual Democracy
    Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 1-27. 2025.
    In this article, I draw on the neglected tradition of African political and legal philosophy to address the sort of representative democracy suitable for twenty-first century urban societies. In particular, I present and evaluate for a global audience consensualism about democracy, the view that some kind of unanimous agreement amongst elected legislators should normally be a necessary condition for a statute to count as valid law. After expounding this view, which is more or less the default in…Read more
  •  1079
    Defending a Relational Account of Moral Status
    In Mbih Jerome Tosam & Erasmus Masitera (eds.), African Agrarian Philosophy, Springer. pp. 105-124. 2023.
    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
  •  10
    The Meaning of Life
    In Duncan Pritchard (ed.), What Is This Thing Called Philosophy?, Routledge. pp. 319-358. 2015.
    A three chapter part of a textbook for undergraduate philosophy majors.
  •  126
    Questioning African Attempts to Ground Ethics on Metaphysics
    In Elvis Imafidon & John Ayotunde Isola Bewaji (eds.), Ontologized Ethics: New Essays in African Meta-Ethics, Lexington Books. pp. 189-204. 2013.
    In the literature on African moral philosophy, it is common to find normative conclusions about the way we ought to act directly drawn from purported metaphysical facts about the nature of ourselves and the world. For example, Kwame Gyekye, the most influential sub-Saharan political philosopher, attempts to defend moderate communitarianism, roughly the view that agents have strong duties to support others in ways that do not violate human rights, by contending that it follows from the dual natur…Read more
  •  1
    The Ethics of Using Love to Reduce Loneliness
    In Kaitlyn Creasy (ed.), The Moral Psychology of Loneliness, Rowman & Littlefield. forthcoming.
    I consider a certain ethical quandary that arises upon loving another person in order to reduce one’s loneliness. Specifically, I suppose that there is something right about the Frankfurt School psychologist and social philosopher Erich Fromm’s powerful dictum that an infantile love takes the form of ‘I love you because I need you’, whereas a mature love is typified by ‘I need you because I love you’. On the face of it, it seems that loving another person to reduce one’s loneliness would unavoid…Read more
  •  138
    The Meaning of Life (Annotated Bibliography)
    In Duncan Pritchard (ed.), Oxford Bibliographies in Philosophy, Oxford University Press. 2011.
    An annotated bibliography of the most important recent English-speaking philosophical work on meaning in life.
  •  1
    Drawing on ideas principally from contemporary Anglo-American and Continental philosophers, I strive to help readers understand which kinds of lives can exhibit meaning, how meaning relates to other human values, and which major ways there are to produce meaning or, conversely, reduce it. I begin by analyzing the concept of life’s meaning, discussing issues such as how meaning differs from modern construals of happiness and morality, how choiceworthy meaning is relative to other values, and what…Read more
  • In the course of expounding his ideal of a decent society, Avishai Margalit provides an account of what justifies respect or, relatedly, forbids humiliation, and he thoughtfully specifies revealing instances of humiliation in a variety of institutions that render a society indecent. About his position, I make two claims. One is that there are logical gaps between Margalit’s account of what it is about human beings that warrants respect and of why it is wrong to humiliate them, on the one hand, a…Read more
  •  16
    Introspection in the African Tradition
    In Anna Giustina (ed.), The Routledge Handbook of Introspection, Routledge. pp. 110-124. 2026.
    The chapter initially provides a brief overview of African epistemology, partly to acquaint the reader with the field and partly to show that introspection as a distinct source of knowledge has yet to receive sustained consideration in it. The rest of the essay expounds and motivates as prima facie plausible the characteristically African view that one’s personal identity is essentially (even if not exhaustively) relational in some way, and it argues that, if one’s self were indeed relational, t…Read more
  • Why Vitalism Cannot Make Sense of Evil
    In Grivas Kayange & Dorothy Tembo (eds.), Where Is the African God?, Brill. forthcoming.
    I consider whether a vitalist axiology, widely accepted in the African philosophical tradition, especially among religionists, can make adequate sense of evil, understood as what is bad in itself. I provide an important reason for thinking that it cannot, which African philosophers of religion and ethicists have yet to address. The reason is that a vitalist approach must construe evil as the reduction or other lack of vitality, while some evil conditions, such as cancer or torture, cannot be ade…Read more
  •  715
    Chinese translation of an essay comparing indigenous African and Chinese values.
  • Values in China as Compared to Africa: Two Conceptions of Harmony (repr.)
    In Social Sciences Chinese Academy (ed.), The Collected Works at the Symposium on Chinese Studies 2017, China Social Sciences Press. pp. 620-631. 2018.
    Reprint of an essay comparing indigenous African and Chinese values.