Abstract :
The study explores “towards an African epistemic rebirth: balancing the values of science and African cultural values” explores the enduring tension and potential harmony between Western scientific rationalism and indigenous African epistemologies. Anchored in an exploratory design, the study adopts a qualitative methodology relying on secondary data drawn from philosophical texts, African cultural studies, ethnographic reports, and contemporary discourses on decolonial epistemology. The analysis interrogates how colonial and postcolonial intellectual legacies have marginalized African ways of knowing, privileging positivist and materialist paradigms over relational, communal, and spiritual epistemic orientations embedded in African traditions. Findings reveal that Africa’s epistemic crisis stems from a dual alienation first from the imposition of Eurocentric science as the only legitimate knowledge system, and second from the internal erosion of traditional cosmologies under modernization pressures. However, the study identifies a growing intellectual movement advocating for epistemic pluralism one that situates scientific inquiry within African value systems emphasizing harmony, communal wellbeing, spirituality, and respect for nature. This synthesis is not anti-science but pro-balance: it calls for a knowledge ecology where empirical rationality and indigenous wisdom mutually reinforce social progress and ethical responsibility. The paper concludes that Africa’s epistemic rebirth requires a dialogical integration of science and culture, where scientific education, innovation, and policy are grounded in African philosophical worldviews. It recommends that universities and research institutions adopt intercultural epistemology frameworks, promote indigenous knowledge systems (IKS), and support curricula that valorize African languages, ethics, and cosmologies alongside modern science. Such reforms will restore Africa’s intellectual sovereignty and foster sustainable development rooted in its cultural identity.
Keywords :
African epistemology, indigenous knowledge systems, epistemic pluralism, scientific rationalism, decolonial epistemology, African cultural valuesReferences :
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