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4ì 10, 2026
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"If our objective is to find things in common and only that, we will fail to see the differences. The universalist claim of Western philosophy has often used the argument of commonality to enclose other philosophies in a paternalising embrace â contending that philosophy does not depend on gender, race or culture, being human at heart. As a result, its own cultural, ethnical and gender-related assumptions can barely be discerned."
"The famous saying of Karl Marx in his 11th âThesis on Feuerbachâ that until today philosophy only had interpreted the world, but that from now on and further it would be about changing it, this adage could very well be modified in the following sense: Until now, the dominant philosophy only has been interpreted as philosophy of the dominators, but the moment is coming that the kenosis have to serve the dominated and have to change the world from below."
"Since the stories of the Hebrew Bible, that were passed on by the Greeks and the Romans and reaching the conquerors and cultural imperialists of all times, the misleading but always convincing syllogism has been the same: âWe have civilization and reason; the others are totally different (totaliter aliter) from us; ergo: the others do not have culture and reason.â"
"The Good News (eu-angeliĂłn) ... have in reality been Bad News (dys-angeliĂłn) for many inhabitants of Abya Yala."
"Already in the verdict cited by GinĂ©s de SepĂșlveda are mentioned a lot of these criteria which the Western philosophical academy nowadays uses against the supposed âindigenous philosophiesâ: âcultureâ, âlettersâ (graficity), âhistoryâ, âwritten lawsâ. We are dealing with a violent and excluding act of âdefinitionâ that excludes a priori the other. When one defines âphilosophyâ as a product elaborated by individuals (philosophical persons) and expressed in written texts (essays, articles, books), using a binary logic and a discursive rationality, thus one excludes per definitionem all philosophical expressions that donât have an individual author, that arenât put down in writing, that donât obey the logical principle of the formal non-contradiction and that apply a non-discursive rationality. Ergo: non philosophia est."
"The situation of the era of GinĂ©s de SepĂșlveda essentially hasnât changed: the Occident â now more the North-American stream than the Spanish â remains convinced of its âcultural superiorityâ, convinced of the right to bring its civilizing gospel to the whole world and transmit philosophical ideas to the âbarbarianâ peoples for their redemption. The conditions of the process and the actual strategies of economic and cultural globalization do not favor an inclusive dialogue between the dominant Western philosophy and the Andean philosophy in which both play an equivalent role."