Assignment 1
Semester 1
Due March 2026
, 1. Distinction between Philosophy and Western Philosophy and
the problems of failing to make such a distinction
Philosophy, in its broadest sense, is the systematic study of fundamental questions
regarding existence, knowledge, morality, reason, mind, and language (Grayling, 2019).
It seeks to uncover truths about the human condition, reality, and our place within it,
employing reasoning and critical analysis rather than empirical experimentation alone.
Western philosophy, however, refers specifically to the philosophical traditions that
developed in Europe and the Western world, historically rooted in Ancient Greece and
continuing through Roman, medieval, modern, and contemporary European thought
(Kenny, 2012). This distinction is significant because while Western philosophy
represents one historical trajectory, philosophy itself is universal, encompassing a wide
range of traditions including African, Asian, Indigenous, and Islamic philosophies.
The distinction lies primarily in geographical, cultural, and historical contexts.
Western philosophy begins with figures such as Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle,
emphasizing logic, metaphysics, epistemology, and ethics as framed within a rationalist
and analytic tradition (Kenny, 2012). Non-Western philosophies, such as African or
Eastern philosophies, often incorporate communal, spiritual, and practical dimensions of
knowledge that are interwoven with cultural and societal practices. For example, African
philosophy emphasizes communal values (Ubuntu) and oral traditions as legitimate
sources of knowledge, while Indian philosophies like Advaita Vedanta explore
metaphysical unity through meditation and lived experience (Wiredu, 1996). Ignoring
this distinction risks universalizing Western philosophical paradigms, treating them
as the only legitimate form of philosophical inquiry and marginalizing other rich
intellectual traditions.
Failing to differentiate between philosophy and Western philosophy leads to epistemic
bias and pedagogical limitations. Students may come to believe that critical thought,
metaphysics, or ethics only exist in the Western canon, overlooking diverse
perspectives that challenge assumptions about human nature, morality, and knowledge.
For instance, teaching Plato’s Forms as universally accepted metaphysical constructs