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The article defends ubuntu against the assault by Enslin and Horsthemke (Comp Educ 40(4):545–558, 2004). It challenges claims that the Africanist/Afrocentrist project, in which the philosophy of ubuntu is central, faces numerous problems, involves substantial political, moral, epistemological and educational errors, and should therefore not be the basis for education for democratic citizenship in the South African context. The article finds coincidence between some of the values implicit in ubuntu and some of the values that are enshrined in the constitution of South Africa and that on that basis argues that ubuntu has the potential to serve as a moral theory and a public policy. The educational
upshot of this article’s argument is that South Africa’s educational policy framework not
only places a high premium on ubuntu, which it conceives as human dignity, but it also
requires the schooling system to promote ubuntu-oriented attributes and dispositions
among the learners. The article finds similarities between ubuntu and bildung, whose key
advocates, among others was German scholar and intellectual Wilhelm von Humboldt. It
argues that it would be ethnocentric, and indeed silly to suggest that the ubuntu ethic of
caring and sharing is uniquely African when some of the values which it seeks to promote
can also be traced in various Eurasian philosophies. |
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