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Groundwork for the Practice of the Good Life: Politics and Ethics at the Intersection of North Atlantic and African Philosophy [Minkštas viršelis]

(Denison University, USA)
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What makes for good societies and good lives in a global world? In this landmark work of political and ethical philosophy, Omedi Ochieng offers a radical reassessment of a millennia-old question. He does so by offering a stringent critique of both North Atlantic and African philosophical traditions, which he argues unfold visions of the good life that are characterized by idealism, moralism, and parochialism. But rather than simply opposing these flawed visions of the good life with his own set of alternative prescriptions, Ochieng argues that it is critically important to step back and understand the stakes of the question. Those stakes, he suggests, are to be found only through a social ontology – a comprehensive and in-depth account of the political, economic, and cultural structures that mark the boundaries and limits of life in the twenty-first century. It is only in light of this social ontology that Ochieng then proffers an alternative normative account of the good society and the good life – which he spells out as emergent from ecological embeddedness; social entanglement; embodied encounter; and aesthetic engenderment. At once sweeping and rigorous, incisive and subtle, original and revisionary, this book does more than just appeal to intellectuals and scholars across the humanities and social sciences – rather, it opens up the academic disciplines to a whole new landscape of exploration into the biggest and most pressing questions animating the human experience.

Acknowledgments vii
Introduction: Groundwork for the Infraphysics of Practice: The Good Society and the Good Life in North Atlantic and African Philosophy 1(9)
Critical Practice
4(3)
Outline of the Book
7(3)
1 "Think Relationally, Act Structurally": A Social Ontology of the Good Society
10(107)
1 Introduction
10(2)
2 Mapping Social Ontology
12(46)
2.1 Social Structure
12(15)
2.2 Subjectivity
27(4)
2.3 Power, Legitimation, and Ideology
31(21)
2.4 Agency
52(3)
2.5 Normativity
55(3)
3 Vectors and Dimensions of the Good Society
58(46)
3.1 Interanimated Historiography
58(6)
3.2 Chronotopian Political Imagination
64(14)
3.3 Secular or Naturalistic Structures
78(12)
3.4 Restructurative Justice
90(14)
4 Conclusion
104(13)
2 Chronotopes: Archaeologies and Landscapes of the Good Society
117(75)
1 Introduction
117(1)
2 Contextualizing "Africa"
117(6)
3 African Political Structures
123(57)
3.1 Auto-politics
124(2)
3.2 Inter-politics
126(5)
3.3 Pneuma/Theo-politics
131(3)
3.4 Meta-politics
134(20)
3.5 Anti-politics
154(6)
3.6 Dia-politics
160(4)
3.7 Ethno-politics
164(5)
3.8 A-politics/Post-politics
169(2)
3.9 Endo-politics
171(4)
3.10 Poly-politics
175(5)
4 Conclusion
180(12)
3 Creaturely Value: A Meta-Ethics of the Good Life
192(33)
1 Introduction
192(1)
2 The Epistemology of Ethics
193(7)
3 Mapping an Ontology of Ethics
200(18)
3.1 Contextual Creatureliness
200(9)
3.2 Toward a Critique of Dominant Ethical Theories
209(9)
4 Conclusion
218(7)
4 Emergent Normativity: The Good Life as the Articulation of Ground Projects
225(36)
1 Introduction
225(21)
1.1 Ground Projects as World-Articulations
226(4)
1.2 Ground Projects as Self-Articulations
230(6)
1.3 Ground Projects as Knowledge Articulations
236(8)
1.4 Ground Projects as Meaning Articulation
244(2)
2 Embodiments of the Ethical
246(10)
2.1 The Hero
246(4)
2.2 The Saint
250(3)
2.3 The Citizen
253(3)
3 Conclusion
256(5)
Conclusion: The Owl of Minerva at Noon: Imagining Good Societies and Good Lives 261(7)
Index 268
Dr. Omedi Ochieng is an Assistant Professor of Communication at Denison University. His areas of specialization include the rhetoric of philosophy; comparative philosophy; and social theory. He has published articles in the International Philosophical Quarterly, Radical Philosophy, and the Western Journal of Communication.