From January 2023, it is accompanied by ParaView 5.10.1, provided by the paraviewopenfoam510 pack. It was originally accompanied by ParaView 5.6.3, compiled with the official OpenFOAM reader module, provided by the paraviewopenfoam56 pack. You can read the full conversation on IDEAS.OpenFOAM 10 is a major new release of OpenFOAM provided by the openfoam10 pack. A measure of responsibility is part of our obligation, whether it comes to us through religion or a moral obligation of duty to others. That's why all human beings fundamentally have a certain element of conscience even when our societies may push us to be individualistic. There have always been movements in the West that have prioritized the other over the self. Yet, even the West is haunted by other, competing, values such as human rights. That, for me, is the moral obligation that sometimes is absent when undue emphasis is placed on individualism and the self, when it’s “all about me,” and everybody else comes second. JO: An empathy, yes, there's empathy, there's trust, that is built in this process. When the gaze is returned, that recognition is what humanizes you. You must, as the Russian critic Bakhtin would say, look into another person’s eyes and have that person return the gaze. James Ogude: There's a sense in which ubuntu as a concept, and the African communitarian ethos, imposes a sense of moral obligation regarding your responsibility for others even before you think of yourself. Is there a different way of thinking about the self in this African tradition you've been describing? It's not necessarily defined by my relationship with other people. I'm thinking in terms of what constitutes “a good life.” In the West, that concept seems to be rooted in the concept of selfhood: how I think about, or know, myself or the course of my life and achievements. Steve Paulson: We've been talking about ubuntu in this legal sense of how to redress wrongs, and I am wondering at the more everyday level, how ubuntu plays out. Here's an excerpt from the transcript of their conversation, which you can find on IDEAS, a publication published by CHCI. The workshop was sponsored by the Consortium of Humanities Centers and Institutes (CHCI). Ogude spoke with Steve and Anne at the first African Humanities Workshop, which took place at the University of Addis Ababa. This idea also extends to our relationships with the non-human world of rivers, plants and animals. "We have the ability, as people, to dig into our human values, to go for the best of them, in order to bring about healing and to bridge the gap," Ogude said. Ubuntu promotes restorative justice and a community-centric ethos. And once you have debated, then it is understood what is best for the community, and then you have to buy into that."Īrchbishop Desmond Tutu drew on the concept of ubuntu when he led South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission, which helped South Africa reckon with its history of apartheid. "It is about coming together and building a consensus around what affects the community. "People will debate, people will disagree it's not like there are no tensions," said Ogude. In practice, ubuntu means believing the common bonds within a group are more important than any individual arguments and divisions within it. "In other words, as a human being, you-your humanity, your personhood-you are fostered in relation to other people." "Ubuntu is rooted in what I call a relational form of personhood, basically meaning that you are because of the others," said Ogude, speaking to Steve Paulson and Anne Strainchamps in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. It’s a way of living that begins with the premise that “I am” only because “we are.” The Kenyan literary scholar James Ogude believes ubuntu might serve as a counterweight to the rampant individualism that’s so pervasive in the contemporary world. But what if there’s an entirely different way to think about personal identity - a non-Western philosophy that rejects this emphasis on individuality?Ĭonsider the African philosophy of “ubuntu” - a concept in which your sense of self is shaped by your relationships with other people. Rene Descartes is often called the first modern philosopher, and his famous saying, “I think, therefore I am,” laid the groundwork for how we conceptualize our sense of self.
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