Emeritus Professor Gyekye has numerous publications in international philosophical and scholarly journals. He has published several books. Elected a Fellow of the Ghana Academy of Arts and Sciences in April 1989, Emeritus Professor Gyekye served as its Honorary Secretary in 1992/1993 and as the Vice-President (Arts) of the Academy from January 2003 to December 2006. He was appointed the first “Scholar-in-Residence” at Ashes University College in Accra, (Ghana) for the fall semester of the 2010/2011 academic year. And, since September 2010, he has been teaching a graduate course on Ethics in Management at the School of Graduate Studies of the University of Professional Studies in Accra.

  • Philosophy, Culture and Vision: African Perspectives

    Believing that the intellectual enterprise called philosophy is essentially a part of the cultural as well as historical experience of a people, that the concepts and problems that occupy the attention of philosophers placed in different cultural spaces or historical times generally derive directly from those spaces and times, and that philosophy, in turn, has been most relevant to the development of human cultures, the Ghanaian philosopher Kwame Gyekye gives reflective attention in this book to some of the concepts and problems that in his view feature most prominently in the contemporary African cultural, social, political, and moral experience. Such concepts and problems include the following: political legitimacy, development, culture and the pursuit of science and technology, political corruption, democracy, representation and the politics of inclusion, the status of cultural values in national orientation, understanding globalization, and others. It is these topics that are covered in the essays collected in this book.

    The unrelenting pursuit of the speculative activity by the philosopher in most cases eventuates in normative proposals; these normative proposals often embody a vision-a vision of an ideal human society in terms of its values, politics, and culture. Vision, understood here, has human-not supernatural or divine-origination and involvement and requires action by human beings in order for it to come into reality. A vision may derive from sustained critical evaluation of a culture or some elements of it. Gyekye attempts an articulation of the visions of the essays contained in the book.

    Even though philosophical ideas and concerns are originally inspired by and worked out in a cultural milieu, it does not necessarily follow, Gyekye strongly believes, that the relevance of those ideas and insights is to be tetheed to the cultures that produced them. For, more often than not, the relevance of those ideas, or at least some of them, transcends the confines of their own times and cultures and can be appreciated by other societies, or cultures, or generational epochs. This trans-cultural or trans-epochal or meta-contextual appeal or attraction of philosophical ideas and insights spawned by a particular culture or cluster of cultures or in specific historical times is to be put down to our common human nature-including our basic human desires and aspirations. Thus, most of the essays published here should be of interest to the global community-i.e., to cultures and societies beyond the African.

  • We the People and the Politics of Inclusion (Annual Lecture in the Humanities)

    Lecture delivered by Professor Kwame Gyekye, Emeritus Professor of Philosophy, University of Ghana and Scholar-in-Residence, Ashesi University (2010/2011). Delivered on 24 September 2013.

    “The words of the preamble of constitutions are emphatic on the centrality of the status of the people in the political order that was expected to be established by these constitutions. The self-referential phrase – We the People – mandates, without a shadow of doubt, a political system that is to be an inclusive system. For, without the politics of inclusion, that self-referential phrase becomes drained of real significance. It is the politics of inclusion, as interpreted in this lecture, that will, beyond representation, give adequate effect to and practical translation of the notion of the constitutional phrase: We the People.”

  • Globalisation

    Proceedings, 2002.

    Papers included are as follows:

    Environment, Poverty and Health – Professor Fred T. Sai

    Origins of Globalisation – Dr. Sulley Gariba

    Globalisation: What it Inevitable? – Ms. Abena D. Oduro

    Agriculture and Industry in the Context of Globalisation – Professor Kwadwo Asenso-Okyere

    Impact of Globalisation – Hon. Dr. K.K. Apraku

    The Urban Poor – Globalisation and the Alleviation of Poverty – Dr. Paa Kwesi Nduom

    Rural Poverty: Are There Any Exits? – Professor Nana Araba Apt

    Understanding Globalisation – Professor Kwame Gyekye

    Globalisation

    20.00

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