An African Philosophy of Religion Scholarly Lecture Series
Powered by the Global Philosophy of Religion Project 2
Topic: Recent Challenges to Vitalism in African Philosophy of Religion
By
Kirk Lougheed (Unity Health Toronto/University of Toronto/University of Pretoria)
Wednesday, February 11th, 2025
17.30 – 18.30 GMT
ZOOM Link: https://bham-ac-uk.zoom.us/j/86220828193
Abstract
Vital force is a substance that flows from God and is imbued in literally everything that exists, both animate and inanimate objects. Characteristics of positive vital force include strength, health, creativity, and fertility. A reduction of vitalism is marked by weakness, depression, illness, and infertility. Vitalism continues to be an important concept in the literature on African philosophy of religion and has received significant attention lately. This talk responds to two recent criticisms of vitalism located in the work of Attoe and Chimakonam (2025). First, they suggest that there is no “logical justification” for believing in the truth of vitalism. This is because the existence of competing naturalistic explanations for what vitalism purports to defend is a defeater for vitalism. I suggest that more is needed to be done to show that a naturalistic explanation is preferable to one that posits vitalism. Second, Attoe and Chimakonam also claim that one challenge to appealing to the naturalistic conception of vitalism known as liveliness is that it is unnecessary because it does not add anything to existing naturalistic explanations of characteristics like creativity or fertility. I counter that being able to synthesize a number of characteristics under one subsuming concept does indeed add to explanatory scope. To conclude, I highlight some ways that this discussion is reflective of more general debates about when one theory or explanation ought to be preferred to an alternative. Even more theorizing about vitalism is needed to continue to evaluate how it compares with both rival religious and naturalistic alternatives.
Next Talk
25th February 2026 – Emmanuel Ofuasia: The explanatory powers of divine silence and divine hiddenness in African spirituality. TBC.
More on https://globalphilosophyofreligion.com/


