List of Tables Acknowledgements Biographical Information on Selected African American Philosophers Introduction 1. Through the Back Door: The Problem of History and the African American Philosopher/Philosophy 2. The Problem of Philosophy: Metaphilosophical Considerations 3. The Search for Values: Axiology in Ebony 4. Philosophy of Science: African American Deliberations 5. Mapping the Disciplinary Contours of the Philosophy of Religion: Reason, Faith, and African American Religious Culture Bibliography Index
A major new approach to understanding the philosophical themes, conceptual problems and central role of African American philosophers within contemporary philosophy.
John H. McClendon III is Professor in the Department of Philosophy at Michigan State University, USA. Stephen C. Ferguson II is an Associate Professor in the Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies at North Carolina State University, USA.
This groundbreaking work introduces us to the ideas of African
American (AA) who were academically trained in classical and modern
philosophy. It shows the extent that philosophical reflection has
been present among AA scholars, though their work has been ignored
by the philosophical establishment. The chapters explore AA
contributions to philosophical questions regarding: the origins of
philosophy; ethics; aesthetics and the philosophy of music;
philosophy of science; and the philosophy of religion. The glossary
is invaluable resource. It provides a list of 103 AA’s with
doctorates in philosophy and related fields granted since
emancipation, the institution they graduated from, and their
dissertation title. This work provides a needed historical
framework for AA academic philosophy.
*Albert Mosley, Professor of Philosophy, Smith College, USA*
I have been searching for a work that speaks to the vast history of
the Black philosophical experience in the United States, from the
perspective of a materialist approach. In clear and detailed
language, the authors examine philosophy, once committed to an
bourgeois ideology, by recovering the legacy of Black Philosophical
thought.
*Brittany L. O’Neal, Adjunct Assistant Professor of Africana
Studies, Lehman College, City University of New York, USA*
Ferguson and McClendon’s indispensable African American
Philosophers and Philosophy recovers a rich legacy of Black
philosophical thought, demonstrating its deserved place at the
center of the history and practice of academic philosophy. Too
often, Black philosophy has been regarded as peripheral and
inessential. Ferguson and McClendon show that philosophy’s
pretensions to universalism can be realized only by attending to
the particular philosophical concerns of all its practitioners.
*Vanessa Wills, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, The George
Washington University, USA*
The chapter on philosophy of religion is by far the most
interesting, because publishing American African philosophers'
debates about science and metaphysics is rare … An important volume
… Summing Up: Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates
through faculty.
*CHOICE*
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