TABLE OF
CONTENTS
CERTIFICATION - - - - - II
DEDICATION - - - - - III
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT - - - - - IV
TABLE OF CONTENT - - - VI
CHAPTER ONE
1.0
INTRODUCTION - - - - 1
1.1 STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM - - 4
1.2
PURPOSE OF STUDY - - - - 6
1.3 SCOPE OF STUDY - - - 7
1.4 METHODOLOGY OF THE WORK - - - 7
1.5 DIVISION OF WORK - - - - 7
CHAPTER
TWO
2.0
LITERATURE REVIEW: THE NOTION OF THE HUMAN PERSON IN
THE HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY. - - - - 9
2.0.1
IN ANCIENT PERIOD - - - - 9
2.0.2
IN MEDIEVAL PERIOD - - 11
2.0.3
IN MODERN PERIOD - - - 12
2.0.4 IN CONTEMPORARY PERIOD - - 13
2.0.5 IN CONTEMPORARY AFRICAN PHILOSOPHY - 16
CHAPTER
THREE
3.0 THE NOTION OF HUMAN PERSON IN KIERKEGAARD - 18
3.1 THE “INDIVIDUAL” AND THE “CROWD” - - 19
3.2 THE
THEORY OF THE THREE STAGES - - 21
3.2.1 THE AESTHETIC STAGE - - - 22
3.2.2
THE ETHICAL STAGE - - - 24
3.2.3
THE RELIGIOUS STAGE - - - 26
3.3
SUBJECTIVITY VERSUS OBJECTIVITY - 28
3.4 THE BASIC TRAITS OF THE HUMAN PERSON
IN KIERKEGAARD - - - 31
3.4.1
CHOICE - - - - 32
3.4.2
FREEDOM - - - - - 33
CHAPTER FOUR
4.0
THE INDIVIDUAL IN THE AFRICAN CONCEPT- 35
4.1 AFRICAN COMMUNISM - - - 35
4.2
THE AFRICAN WORLD-VIEW - - 39
4.3
NOTION OF SELF IN AFRICA - - 43
4.4
FREEDOM, DECISION AND CHOICE:
THE
BASES OF AFRICAN INDIVIDUAL - 49
CHAPTER
FIVE
5.0
EVALUATION - - - - - 52
5.1
KIERKEGAARDIAN PERSON VERSUS
THE AFRICAN INDIVIDUAL - - - 53
5.2
THE AUTHENTIC SELF - - 60
5.3
CONCLUSION - - - - 61
BIBLIOGRAPHY - - - - - 62
CHAPTER ONE
1.0
INTRODUCTION
There are
diverse understanding of the concept of the human person among thinkers and
philosophers. In this regard, Arthur C. Danto affirms that “Neither in common
usage, nor in philosophy has there been a univocal concept of ‘person”.
But basically, the English word
‘person’ is derived from the Latin word, ‘persona,’ which can be traced to the
Greek ‘prosopon,’ which in its original sense denotes the ‘mask’ worn by an
actor. Later it came to refer to the role played by the actor or the dramatist,
and finally to the human being as an actor on the stage of life; as Willaim
Shakespeare says: Life is a stage where each person is an actor. Cicero used
the term ‘person’ to denote an assumed appearance, a mark of distinction or
dignity or a sum total of personal qualities.
Legally
speaking, person denotes a subject of law, a being bound by law. This is
evident in the Roman legal system where person designates cives Romani-the
Roman citizen, a man who enjoys the citizenship (civitatis) or freedom
(libertatis). In this sense, person refers to that being that possesses certain
rights and conditions that make him capable of exercising them.
Nevertheless,
the advent of the existentialist style of philosophizing brought about a kind
of ‘Copernican revolution’ to the understanding of the human person in the
history of Western philosophy. Kierkegaard, the “father of modern
existentialism and the first European philosopher who bore the existentialist
label”
paid particular attention to the concept of the human person. Just like
Heidegger who pointed out the forgetfulness of ‘Being’ in traditional
philosophy occasioned by the influence of science, Kierkegaard reacts against
the forgetfulness of the concrete problems of the “thinking subject” in the
history of thought. The early Greek philosophers were physicists, who had no
direct concern about the human person. It was Socrates who first directed the
attention of philosophy to the issues about man himself. After Socrates, the
concrete problems of the human person were forgotten again until the dawn of
existentialism.
Existentialism
has been described “not as a ‘philosophy’ but rather as ‘a style of
philosophizing’”.
It is a style that may lead those who adopt it to very divergent convictions
about the world and man’s life in it. This diversity is obviously evidenced by
a study of the thought of such existentialist thinkers like Kierkegaard, Sartre
and Heidegger. Kierkegaard believes in the existence of God, Sartre denies the
existence of God, whereas Heidegger neither affirms nor denies the existence of
God. However, there are some strings of similarities in their general
considerations of the business of philosophy and also in the understanding of
the concept of the human person.
The first
significant common feature of the existentialist philosophers is that they
begin from
man rather than from nature. Existentialism is a philosophical movement
concerned with the subject rather than the object. This is unlike idealism,
which starts from the subject only as the “thinking subject”. For the
existentialists, “the subject is the existent in the whole range of his
existing”.
He is not only a thinking subject but also an initiator of action and a center
of feeling. With regard to this, Sartre says, “Man’s existence precedes his
essence.” He highlights that “man first of all
exists, encounters himself, surges up in the world and defines himself
afterwards”. Thus, the
existentialists, unlike the traditional Western metaphysicians concentrate on
problems that are directly related to human existence rather than on the
abstract or speculative issues.
In relation
to the “existing subject”, the
existentialists treat such themes as freedom, decision, responsibility,
finitude, guilt, alienation, despair, death, the emotional life of man,
problems of language, history, society, and being. Some of these matters, which
are of great interest to the existentialists, have hitherto scarcely been
regarded as appropriate themes for philosophy at all. However, it is in the
exploration and development of these themes, drawn mostly from the affective
elements in personal life that the existentialist philosophers have made their
most important and characteristic contributions to philosophy.
The African
equally has a well-developed view of the “existing subject”. For the African,
the “existing subject’, that is, the human person is not alone in the exercise
of his freedom, decision, choice, responsibility and so on. He is a being
with-others. He is never an Island in the world of things and persons. Hence,
John Mbiti has to say of the African man: “I am because we are; and since we
are, therefore I am”. Africans
have a unitary world-view. These imply that while Kierkegaard’s individual, the
“existing subject,” is highly individualistic, Africans make a further step of
considering the individual not just as a selfish existing subject, but more as
a subject existing among other subjects. In Heideggerian parlance, the African
considers the human person as a “being-with”. It is this rather conflicting
notion of the human person in Kierkegaard and the African that forms the crux
of this investigation.
1.1 STATEMENT
OF THE PROBLEM
The notion
of the human person has been a matter of serious concern to the existentialist
philosophers. But prior to the emergence of this movement, philosophers have
neglected the matters concerning the concrete existing man. The pre-Socratic
philosophers concentrated on the cosmological aspect of the world. It was
Socrates who came and for the first time, directed the attention of philosophy
to man. His belief is that all the physical existents exist only in relation to
the existing subject. And this is correct. But no sooner had Socrates gone out
of sight than the concrete problems of man in his environment were forgotten.
Philosophers deviated from the existing individual to the physical sciences.
Philosophers over the ages have been philosophizing on abstract principles that
have no direct relevance to the existing individual. This led to the
depersonalization, dehumanization and objectification of the human person. Man
was no more regarded as a dignified being but rather considered in relation to
the function he was able to perform. This frightening erosion of human values
and the abysmal depreciation of the dignity of the human person reached its
apogee at the dawn of the twentieth century technological advancement. To be
particular, the absence of the ‘person’ as an existent in the philosophy of
Hegel woke Kierkegaard from his ignoble slumber and brought forth the birth of
existentialism.
Hence, it
was kierkegaard’s rebellion against Hegel’s dissolute pantheistic contempt for
the individual that became the ‘point de depart’ of contemporary
existentialism. Thus, Kierkegaard insists on “studying man in his radical
singularity and individuality, a man who is constantly faced with making
momentous decisions that spell the difference between authentic and inauthentic
existence”. He considers the individual’s lived
experience in its unrepeatable uniqueness. Existentialism therefore abhors any
attempt at objectification or universalization of that which eminently is
singular and belongs to the individual.
Now, there is a relevant question to be asked: Does the
Kierkegaardian existentialism have any room for the other individuals? Or, does
every individual have to face his world of existence alone? The attempts to
answer the questions will definitely brings us face to face with either the
convergence or divergence between kierkegaardian and the African notions of the
human person. How to solve this problem is the basic problem we are posed to
grapple with.
1.2 PURPOSE OF
STUDY
The purpose
of this study is a comparative analysis between kierkegaardian view of the
human person and the African view. This, when done, will hopefully go a long
way in helping us know what an authentic person should be. The work attempts an
integration of the Western view of the human person represented by Kierkegaard,
and the African conception. Hence, rejecting the depersonalization,
objectification and dehumanization of man, we come to know really what the
existing individual actually is.
1.3 SCOPE
OF STUDY
This work
is not going to exhaust all that Kierkegaard treated on the existing
individual. But as space allows, his major view of the individual as a free
human agent who is able to choose his actions and take responsibility for his
choices and decisions will be considered. This will be juxtaposed with the
African notion of freedom, choice and decision of the existing individual.
1.4
METHODOLOGY
OF THE WORK
The problem
before us is not a metaphysical one, but an existential one. Therefore, I will
apply the method of existential and comparative critical analysis of what the
authentic self should be-drawing from Kierkegaardian and African conceptions.
Man will be considered not only as a thinking subject, but also as an existing
subject.
1.5 DIVISION
OF WORK
This work
is divided into five chapters. The first chapter tries to give the general
introduction to the work. Herein, the problem to be tackled, the purpose,
scope, methodology and the division of the work are given. In the second
chapter, we shall attempt the review of literature on the notion of the human
person from the inception of critical philosophy in Ancient Greece till the
contemporary age. An exposé of Kierkegaardian notion of the human person is
given in chapter three, whereas the African concept of the individual in
highlighted in chapter four. In chapter five, we shall attempt the
juxtaposition of the Kierkegaardian and the African person. This will be an
evaluation of both views and finally, a conclusion on what the authentic self
should be from the perspective of the researcher.
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