The promise and problems of intercultural philosophy

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

Authors

Hofmeyr, H.M. (Henry Murray)
South African Society for Greek Philosophy and the Humanities

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

South African Society for Greek Philosophy and the Humanities

Abstract

In this paper I sketch the main elements of Heinz Kimmerle's conceptualisation of intercultural philosophy: a new concept of difference that makes possible a new take on "different and equal" which is the foundation for real dialogue. I interrogate the concept of culture in intercultural philosophy, and argue that for the South African context sufficient emphasis must be placed on power relations as they impact on cultures and the legacy of a history of cultural domination. I try to show that Kimmerle's notion of the equality of cultures implies that a particular context is taken seriously as a valid instance of the human condition, and in that sense it is of equal status with all other situations. All "localities" are linked in some way or another. It thus belongs to adequately conceptualising the thoughts and feelings of a specific locality that the need for dialogue should be reflected. A philosophy that negates these shifts would be disqualified as inadequate. The fact that it seeks dialogue is indicative of the experience of an aporia. It is lack, incompleteness, which is universal. I also tentatively propose "contextual philosophy" as a more appropriate name for intercultural philosophy in South Africa.

Description

Appears in Phronimon, Volume 5 Number 2(2004)

Keywords

Intercultural philosophy, Contextual philosophy

Sustainable Development Goals

Citation

Hofmeyr, M 2004, 'The promise and problems of intercultural philosophy', Phronimon, vol. 5, no. 2, pp. 51-76.