Socrates suggests in Plato's Theaetetus that philosophy begins with wonder. Aristotle agreed with him. Recent research, however, suggests that wonder may be divided into subsets. If that's the case, what particular type of awe sparked the birth of systematic African philosophy? There are two concepts in Western philosophy: thaumazein, which means awe, and thaumazein, which means fear.The first is thaumazein, which means awe, and the second is miraculum, which means curiosity. These two subcategories can be found in Africa as well, even during the pre-systematic age, according to history. However, in current African philosophy literature, there is a concept known as onuma, which can be translated as frustration and is seen as a subset of amazement.African philosophy as a whole. In the 1920s, a large number of Africans who had gone to the West to study were just returning. While in the West, they had been subjected to horrendous prejudice and discrimination. They were referred to as slaves' descendants, slave colony residents, subhumans, and so on. When they returned to their homelands, they were subjected to the same mistreatment by colonial authority.
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