From wonder to being: Metaphysical enchantment as an African Ratzingerian rejoinder to empirical reductivism

The post and/or modern humanity conceptualise their epistemic ability as providing the singular reliable interlocutor of knowing. However, implicit in this epistemology is modern humanity’s turning away from being qua being to a self-referential, relative and reductive modality of understanding. The...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Callum D. Scott
Format: Article
Language:Afrikaans
Published: AOSIS 2025-04-01
Series:Verbum et Ecclesia
Subjects:
Online Access:https://verbumetecclesia.org.za/index.php/ve/article/view/3397
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849312553863217152
author Callum D. Scott
author_facet Callum D. Scott
author_sort Callum D. Scott
collection DOAJ
description The post and/or modern humanity conceptualise their epistemic ability as providing the singular reliable interlocutor of knowing. However, implicit in this epistemology is modern humanity’s turning away from being qua being to a self-referential, relative and reductive modality of understanding. The ever-growing scientific corpus aids this view on post and/or modern epistemology, but by its success, this knowing has lessened other modes of knowing, e.g., metaphysics, indigenous knowledge systems, etc. In the post and/or modern milieu, the exploration of being is consequently not done on being’s own complex and irreducible terms but only on those construed by the subject. Inspired by the decolonial turn in the African academy and utilising the paradigm of African Philosophy and the Ratzingerian critique, the case is made that the influence of the seemingly opposing – but significantly coupled – reductive epistemological movements of modern empiricism and postmodern relativism have collaborated to disenchant the human experience. By ‘acceptable’ knowledge’s limitation to knowing relative to and/or measurable by the thinking subject, the post and/or modern subject is detached from being and becomes disenchanted in the divestment of wonder. It is contended that for the human to encounter being, wonder before the cosmos as-it-is, that is, the experience of enchantment, must be reclaimed for the sake of non-reductive and non-self-referential knowledge. By appealing to African decolonised epistemology and Aristotelian-Thomism, a more liberated conceptualisation of ‘science’ beyond the constraints of post and/or modern epistemology, incorporating the wondrous, is argued for. Intradisciplinary and/or interdisciplinary implications: Utilising a multimodal approach as developed from the African context, this research touches on fundamental themes in both theology and philosophy, as the argument is made that for being to be apprehended, the experience of wonder and awe needs to be reclaimed. In this sense, the study touches on psychological dimensions of the human experience, modes of knowing and reframing how ‘science’ is defined.
format Article
id doaj-art-56c99f458cdb4a0da8c437c46f786e5b
institution Kabale University
issn 1609-9982
2074-7705
language Afrikaans
publishDate 2025-04-01
publisher AOSIS
record_format Article
series Verbum et Ecclesia
spelling doaj-art-56c99f458cdb4a0da8c437c46f786e5b2025-08-20T03:53:02ZafrAOSISVerbum et Ecclesia1609-99822074-77052025-04-01461e1e1010.4102/ve.v46i1.33972060From wonder to being: Metaphysical enchantment as an African Ratzingerian rejoinder to empirical reductivismCallum D. Scott0Department of Philosophy, Practical and Systematic Theology, College of Human Sciences, University of South Africa, PretoriaThe post and/or modern humanity conceptualise their epistemic ability as providing the singular reliable interlocutor of knowing. However, implicit in this epistemology is modern humanity’s turning away from being qua being to a self-referential, relative and reductive modality of understanding. The ever-growing scientific corpus aids this view on post and/or modern epistemology, but by its success, this knowing has lessened other modes of knowing, e.g., metaphysics, indigenous knowledge systems, etc. In the post and/or modern milieu, the exploration of being is consequently not done on being’s own complex and irreducible terms but only on those construed by the subject. Inspired by the decolonial turn in the African academy and utilising the paradigm of African Philosophy and the Ratzingerian critique, the case is made that the influence of the seemingly opposing – but significantly coupled – reductive epistemological movements of modern empiricism and postmodern relativism have collaborated to disenchant the human experience. By ‘acceptable’ knowledge’s limitation to knowing relative to and/or measurable by the thinking subject, the post and/or modern subject is detached from being and becomes disenchanted in the divestment of wonder. It is contended that for the human to encounter being, wonder before the cosmos as-it-is, that is, the experience of enchantment, must be reclaimed for the sake of non-reductive and non-self-referential knowledge. By appealing to African decolonised epistemology and Aristotelian-Thomism, a more liberated conceptualisation of ‘science’ beyond the constraints of post and/or modern epistemology, incorporating the wondrous, is argued for. Intradisciplinary and/or interdisciplinary implications: Utilising a multimodal approach as developed from the African context, this research touches on fundamental themes in both theology and philosophy, as the argument is made that for being to be apprehended, the experience of wonder and awe needs to be reclaimed. In this sense, the study touches on psychological dimensions of the human experience, modes of knowing and reframing how ‘science’ is defined.https://verbumetecclesia.org.za/index.php/ve/article/view/3397catholic intellectual traditionepistemologysciencemodernitypostmodernityafrican philosophy
spellingShingle Callum D. Scott
From wonder to being: Metaphysical enchantment as an African Ratzingerian rejoinder to empirical reductivism
Verbum et Ecclesia
catholic intellectual tradition
epistemology
science
modernity
postmodernity
african philosophy
title From wonder to being: Metaphysical enchantment as an African Ratzingerian rejoinder to empirical reductivism
title_full From wonder to being: Metaphysical enchantment as an African Ratzingerian rejoinder to empirical reductivism
title_fullStr From wonder to being: Metaphysical enchantment as an African Ratzingerian rejoinder to empirical reductivism
title_full_unstemmed From wonder to being: Metaphysical enchantment as an African Ratzingerian rejoinder to empirical reductivism
title_short From wonder to being: Metaphysical enchantment as an African Ratzingerian rejoinder to empirical reductivism
title_sort from wonder to being metaphysical enchantment as an african ratzingerian rejoinder to empirical reductivism
topic catholic intellectual tradition
epistemology
science
modernity
postmodernity
african philosophy
url https://verbumetecclesia.org.za/index.php/ve/article/view/3397
work_keys_str_mv AT callumdscott fromwondertobeingmetaphysicalenchantmentasanafricanratzingerianrejoindertoempiricalreductivism