This document provides biographical information about Professor Marimba Ani and discusses her scholarly work, including key concepts she developed such as Asili, Utamawazo, and Utamaroho. It also includes an excerpt from her book Yurugu discussing Plato's theory of humanness and how it conceptualized humans as disjointed beings made up of conflicting parts like reason and emotion. The excerpt argues this conception helped provide ideological justification for European imperialism by valorizing "scientific" thought over other ways of knowing.
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RBGz Professor Marimba Ani Yurugu Workshop and Tutorial
1. Including Chapter Extract: "Utamawazo: The Cultural Structuring of Thought"
Play the Workshop
“Rob the universe of its richness, deny the significance of the
symbolic, simplify phenomena until it becomes mere object,
and you have a knowable quantity. Here begins and ends the
European epistemological mode.”
2. RBG Blakademics November, 2010
Professor Marimba Ani and Yurugu
Yurugu is one of RBG Street Scholars Think
Tank's Two Required Textbooks
(The other being Dr. Amos Wilson's Blue Print for Black Power)
Icebreaker mp3
Play Yurugu- Dr. Marimba Ani
Professor Marimba Ani Yurugu Workshop
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Dr Ani's RBG Worldwide Study
Dr. Marimba Ani's Cell THE CHOICE: Yurugu or
RBG Worldwide 1 Afrikan Rebirth
Nation Classroom
About Professor Marimba Ani
Bio From: http://africawithin.com/ani/ani_bio.htm
"Without the African connection, we are a disjointed people ...begging for entry
into somebody else's house."
Dr. John Henrik Clarke, Notes for an African World Revolution Trenton: Africa World Press, 1991, P.418.
Marimba Ani was brought to the Department
of Africana and Puerto Rican Studies by Dr.
John Henrik Clarke in 1974 as she was
completing her PhD dissertation at the
Graduate Faculty of New School University.
She had worked as a field organizer for the
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee in Mississippi
from 1963 to 1966, and had acted as Director of Freedom
Registration for the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party in
1964 which challenged the all-white Mississippi delegation to
the Democratic National Convention in Atlantic City that
summer. Dr. Clarke became her Jegna ("warrior- teacher,
intellectual father, ideological influence") as she moved back
to New York and into graduate school. It was through his
influence that she became committed to Pan Afrikan
liberation.
Professor Marimba Ani Yurugu Workshop
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After having traveled in Afrika, Marimba Ani (born "Dona Richards") began formal study
of the nature of Afrikan Civilization, focusing on the "deep thought" which underlies its
fundamental common cultural themes and the varying constructs of Afrikan social
organization. She has done extensive work on Afrikan spiritual conceptions and
systems. She is using her articulation of the Afrikan world view as a frame of reference
from which to critique European cultural thought, and to construct paradigms for Pan-
Afrikan reconstruction.
Marimba Ani has developed the concepts of Maafa, Asili, Utamawazo, and
Utamaroho as part of the on-going process of Afrikan-centered reconceptualization in
which several Pan-Afrikan scholars are involved. She has helped to initiate an
intellectual and ideological movement, the purpose of which is to construct a theoretical
framework which will allow people of Afrikan descent to explain the universe as it
reflects their collective interests, values and vision.
Her most recent work has been the development of the
Maat/Maafa/Sankofa paradigm as an analytical tool for
understanding and explaining the Afrikan experience in
the Diaspora and to suggest modalities for cultural
reconstruction. Dr. Ani has been lecturing throughout the
United States, the Caribbean and Afrika on this new
theoretical construct which is part of her endeavor to
develop a pragmatic Afrikan Cultural Science. This new
science becomes the basis for the creation of Afrikan
institutions and Nation-Building in the Diaspora.
Having taught at Hunter College for the past 25 years,
Dr. Marimba Ani has had the opportunity to develop a number of courses on various
aspects of the Pan-Afrikan experience. She teaches Afrikan Civilization, Afrikan
Spirituality in the Diaspora, The Afrikan World View, Theories of White Racism, Afrikan
Traditional Healing Systems, Nile Valley Civilization, Afrikan-centered theory, Women in
Afrika, Men in the Afrikan Diaspora, and a number of other courses.
The following are some of the scholarly writings which have resulted from her work:
"The Ideology of European Dominance," The Western Journal of Black Studies. Vol. 3,
No. 4, Winter, 1979, and Presence Africaine, No. 111, 3rd Quarterly, 1979.
"European Mythology: The Ideology of Progress," Contemporary Black Thought, eds. M.
Asante and A. Vandi, Beverly Hills: Sage Publications, 1980, (59-79).
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Let The Circle Be Unbroken: The Implications of Afrikan Spirituality in the Diaspora. New
York: Nkonimfo Publications, 1988 (orig. 1980).
"The Nyama of the Blacksmith: The Metaphysical Significance of Metallurgy in Afrika,"
Journal of Black Studies. Vol. 12, No. 2, December, 1981.
Yurugu: An Afrikan-centered Critique of European Cultural Thought and Behavior.
Trenton: Africa World Press, 1994.
"The Afrikan Asili," Selected Papers from the Proceedings of the Conference on Ethics,
Higher Education and Social Responsibility, Washington, D.C.: Howard University Press,
1996.
"The Afrikan 'Aesthetic' and National Consciousness," The African Aesthetic, ed.
Kariamu Welsh-Asante. Westport, Ct.: Greenwood Press, 1993. (63-82) and To Heal a
People, ed. Erriel Kofi Addae, Columbia, MD.: Kujichagulia Press, 1996 (91-125).
"Writing as a means of enabling Afrikan Self-determination," Defining Ourselves; Black
Writers in the 90's, ed. Elizabeth Nuñez and Brenda M. Greene. New York: Peter Lang,
1999 (209-211).
Marimba Ani is an active organizer in the Afrikan Community. She has conducted
Rites of Passage programs for Afrikan youth and young adults. She travels frequently to
Ghana, West Afrika, where she is continuing her study and support of Afrikan traditional
healing concept and practices. She is part of a "think tank" of Afrikan-centered scholars
currently spear-heading the socially and politically dynamic "To Be Afrikan" campaign.
She is Director of the Afrikan Heritage Afterschool Program, a voluntary effort which has
been operating in the Harlem Community for the past 14 years. Marimba Ani holds a BA
degree in philosophy from the University of Chicago, and the MA and Ph.D. degrees in
anthropology from the Graduate Faculty of the New School University. She is Professor
of Afrikan Studies in the Department of Black and Puerto Rican Studies at Hunter
College in New York City. Her daughter Dzifa graduated in May of 1999 from Howard
University with a BS degree in biology.
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Open Playlist
Textbook Extracts:
From the Glossary
Asili The logos of a culture, within which its various aspects cohere. It is the
developmental germ/seed of a culture. It is the cultural essence, the
ideological core, the matrix of a cultural entity which must be identified in
order to make sense of the collective creations of its members.
Utamawazo Culturally structured thought. It is the way in which cognition is determined
by a cultural Asili. It is the way in which the thought of members of a culture
must be patterned if the Asili is to be fulfilled.
Utamaroho The vital force of a culture, set in motion by the Asili. It is the thrust or
energy source of a culture; that which gives it its emotional tone and
motivates the collective behavior of its members. Both the Utamawazo and
the Utamaroho are born out of the Asili but as its manifestations.
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An Excerpt from Chapter One
"Utamawazo: The Cultural Structuring of Thought"
Theory of Humanness
A theory of the human being has already been implied in our discussion of Platonic conceptions.
We, as humans, are not whole beings, but rather made up of parts that are in continual conflict
with one another. We are made up of "reason," "intellect," and our "better natures," which are
constantly seeking to control our desires, appetites, emotions and to put our "senses" to proper
use. The better part must control the "baser." According to Eric Havelock, Plato "discovered" the
"psyche" that came to refer to the "isolated, thinking of self." The self was no longer conceived
as a cosmic being, that is, a being that experienced itself as intimately involved with other
beings in the cosmos. A "cosmic self" implies that the reality of self is phenomenally part of
other realities presented as a result of sentient, conscious, and spiritual coexistence in the
universe. Cosmos itself refers to the universe as a unified, interrelated (organic) whole.
Havelock is saying that "pre-Platonic" Greece understood the self in this way. That makes
historical sense, since Greece developed out of its cultural and intellectual association with early
African traditions.
The African and Native American world-views have similar cosmic concepts. Their intellectual
traditions and thought-systems rest from a basis of communal relationships as well as a
sympathetic relationship with the natural environment. How would such a conception of the
human being interfere with the ground rules of Platonic epistemology? Why was it essential that
he cast doubt on the validity of such conceptions? A cosmic being must be whole. In such a
being reason and emotion cannot be experienced as disparate, unconnected, and antagonistic.
A cosmic self cannot objectify the universe. The more "intelligent" such a self becomes, the
more it understands language as merely metaphor. This idea is common to the thought-systems
mentioned. The highest, most profound truths cannot be verbalized, and one reaches for the
dimension beyond the profane word where the meaning of the symbols becomes clear. But for
Plato the "cosmic self" is incapable of knowing; it can only perceive, sense, intuit, and have
"opinions." (The ascendancy of the so-called "left-brain.")
Plato establishes instead the "autonomous, thinking self." According to Havelock, this "self" or
"psyche" is a thing or entity capable of not only scientific cognition, but of moral decision. 36 Plato
not only put forth the idea of the "thinking self"—an idea which must have predated him—but he
simultaneously discarded other aspects of our "human" beingness as invalid or unworthy
(unreal) and declared this superconceptual function—this totally cerebral activity—as the
essence of humanness. Therein lies its uniqueness, strangeness, and significance all at once.
He had proffered a new theory of humanness (man/woman). Much later, caught in the throes of
evolutionary theory, it became very important in European thought to emphasize those
characteristics that were thought to separate and distinguish "humans" from animals.
"Intelligence," of course, was key; the essence of man/woman. (For Michael Bradley it is the
"discovery of time.")37 Using Platonic conceptions and elaborating them, intelligence took on a
particular definition.
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Scientists have talked in terms of two parts or "hemispheres" of the brain for some time. The left
hemisphere is believed to control certain kinds of thought processes.38 The implications involved
are important to this discussion and will be discussed later. A related point to be made here is
that while all cultures and all people involve both "hemisphere-modes," so to speak, in "normal"
functioning, cultures and therefore their members can value one style of cognition over another.
In such cases one will be emphasized and encouraged, while the other is not. A person will be
rewarded for thinking in the valued mode, and such habits of thought will be reinforced in the
formalized learning and socialization processes. The same person will be "punished" for
thinking in the "devalued" mode, and will "fail for doing so."
In nineteenth century Europe, in which unilinear evolutionary theory reigned, European
scientists said that the left hemisphere was "major," because it was associated with "thought"
and "reasoning," which set humans apart from animals. The right hemisphere was labeled
"minor" and less advanced or less evolved. It had a "lower" capacity, dealt with "emotion," and
had to be directed by the left hemisphere. Clearly this was a nineteenth century version of the
Platonic conception, which split man/woman into reasonable and emotional tendencies, superior
and inferior faculties, and mandated the dominance and control of the emotional as normative
state of being. And so "order" and "justice" were achieved. Plato stated the case for this kind of
order in the person and, by extension, in the State. Nineteenth century evolutionists were giving
"scientific" backing to the same kind of imposed "order" among the world's cultures controlling
the more "emotional" (lower and less advanced) ones.
The point that is critical to this analysis of European thought and behavior is Platonic theory and
epistemology and its subsequent development, enculturation, and reformulation provided the
most effective ideological underpinning for politically and culturally aggressive and imperialistic
behavior patterns on the part of European people precisely because the argument was stated in
intellectual and academic "scientific" terms. Plato not only helped to establish a theory of the
human that would valorize "scientific" cognition to the exclusion of other cognitive modes, but he
established the Academy. It has since become a characteristic of European culture that
association with academia represents association with truth, superior reasoning capacity, and
impartiality or "objectivity"—this also means a lack of commitment to anything other than the
supposed "abstract truth." What Platonic conceptions allowed for, consequently, was that the
most politically motivated acts (e.g., wars of aggression, racially based slavery) could be
justified in what passed for a-political, "scientific" terms; the terms of a supposed "universal
truth," the eternal, unchanging "idea." This was not necessarily the Platonic objective, but it is
the use to which this conception was put within the confines of European culture, molded by the
needs of the European utamaroho. The asili—demanding power—made appropriate use of the
"universal truth" idea.
The tack here is to lay the groundwork for a comprehensive analysis of European thought and
behavior by examining related aspects of Platonic theory in terms of their ideological
significance in subsequent European development. This analysis ends and begins in synthesis
which is the asili demonstrating the consistency and cohesion, the monolithic character, of the
tradition under scrutiny.
Plato's theory of humanness is a crucial aspect of his over-all theory. He successfully creates an
illusion of the isolated self, and so, in twentieth century European (Euro-American) society, this
self is indeed experienced as the psyche. This conception of the autonomous thinking self has
locked the European into a narrow and limiting view of the human. It precipitated a kind of
spiritual retardation in which painful isolation and alienation either incapacitates participants in
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the culture or makes them extremely efficient competitors, aggressors, and technocrats
(technicians). In the Theatetus, Socrates uses the term "soul" as synonymous with "mind."
Given the Platonic conception of significant mental faculties, this means that the soul became
identified with cognitive thought, with "cold" calculation, with a lack of emotion and a denial of
feeling and sensation. What theory of the human being does this imply? And what kind of
utamaroho and behavior develops in a culture that accepts such a theory? If I am right in
suggesting that these Platonic conceptions did indeed become normative and then
tremendously powerful as cognitive models, and if we can accept the relationship between
utamawazo (cultural cognitive character) and utamaroho (affective characteristics) as being
intimate and co-generative, then clearly a model begins to emerge of patterned thought and
behavior reinforcing each other as they develop.
In the Theaetetus, Socrates talks about the soul perceiving under its own "power." He makes
the distinction between the body and the soul or mind. Through the organs of the body we
perceive "hardness," "cold," "red," etc., but with the mind (soul) we "reflect," make judgments,
and "think" about "likeness," "difference"—things that require knowledge of the "forms" or of
"being." The soul reflects with its own "power," and the objects that it perceives are universal.
Universality emerges as superiority and value. In the chapters which follow, the attribute of
universality will be traced along the road of European ideology as it develops and hardens into
the framework of the culture.
What is it that the soul, mind, or psyche has that the body and senses do not? Clearly it is
control and with control comes power as in "the ability to dominate." The desire (need) for
control and power are the most important factors in understanding the European asili. We will
see that the sensation of controlling others and of therefore having power over them is the most
aesthetically, psychologically, and emotionally satisfying experience that the culture has to offer.
It therefore satisfies the utamaroho. It is the pursuit of these feelings and this state of being that
motivates its members. The sensation of control and power is achieved in many ways in
European culture, but what is significant here is that in its earliest and formative stages, Plato
laid the basis for its achievement through an epistemology that rejected the poetic participation,
thereby gaining "independence" (Havelock) from poetic involvement in order to both "create"
and to apprehend the proper object of knowledge. The "object" was in this way controlled by the
mind that contemplated it. With this knowledge came power, because the world could begin to
be understood as being comprised of many such objects capable of being manipulated by the
knower, the knower who was aware of himself (women didn't count) as knower and as being in
complete control. The "pre-Platonic" man, in this view, was powerless, lacked self-control and
was indeed manipulated by the myriad of emotions he was made to feel by the images around
him. Such is the picture that we are given.
We cannot overstate Plato's significance precisely because we find European theorists and
scholars making the same argument, painting the same picture in the twentieth century. Henri
and H.A. Frankfort are concerned here with the distinction between ancient, "primitive man,"
and "mythopoeic" thought on the one hand and
modern," "scientific" man, and "scientific thought" on the other:
Thought (mythopoeic thought) does not know dead matter and confronts a world
animated from end to end. It is unable to leave the scope of the concrete and
renders its own concepts as realities existing per se. [p.14]
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…the procedure of the mythopoetic mind in expressing a phenomenon by
manifold images corresponding to unconnected avenues of approach clearly
leads away from rather than toward, our postulate of causality which seeks to
discover identical causes for identical effects through-out the phenomenal world.
[p.20]
…mythopoetic thought may succeed no less than modern thought in establishing
a coordinated spatial system; but the system is determined not by objective
measurements, but by an emotional recognition of values.39
Not only does Plato's epistemology bring control accompanied by power, but also its attendant
theory of (hu)man produces the European conception of the authentically moral being. For
Plato, with rationality comes the power to make moral decisions, and only this new "autonomous
thinking self" (Havelock) can properly be the seat of moral decision. This position, however,
represents a confusion between the spiritual and the scientific/rational. Having equated human
potential with an abstracted rational faculty, Plato takes us out of a humanly defined social
context as the ground or determinant of our being. He then places us back into an artificial
social construct that is now a reflection of his abstract concept of the "good" and of the "true"; a
denial of the lived and experienced reality. But in fact, our concepts of morality must reflect our
ideas as well as our feeling about proper human interrelationship. The "rational" person is not
necessarily the "moral" person. It may be "rational" (efficient) to think in terms of selective
breeding, cloning, and extermination in order to produce the "master race." It is neither
spiritually nor morally compelling to do so. Plato seemed to be hinting that scientific method
would generate "right" action. But war in the twentieth century is both rational and irrational at
the same time. European horror movies in which mad scientists do crazy things are expressions
of this seeming contradiction. Yet that personality is a "logical" extension of the Platonic
equation of the moral and the rational.
This argument has been expanded, refined, and camouflaged in the terms of "modern"
European "critical" philosophy. Jurgen Habermas seems to be arguing for a kind of universal
language of "communicative rationality." In which social/cultural beings rely on their own
intellectual examination of issues as the basis for judgment, as opposed to relying on their
cultural traditions as a source of validation of choices/actions.40 This for Habermas would be
part of the process of "rationalization" and can lead to authentic moral behavior or at least a
criterion for determining such. His own language is that of European philosophic discourse of
the 1980s; the Platonic model honed to cerebral perfection. It is "rationality" at its most
impressive calling for a universal rationalism as the basis for "rational action orientations" 40 and
rationalized social order. Habermas uses Piaget's theory of cognitive development in relation to
the valued process of "decentration," in which a priori
In his theory of (hu)man and of the State Plato succeeds in exorcising human and social reality
of its problematical and ambiguous character. He does this by creating his own reality in which
the mathematical abstraction reigns. "Real" truth, he says, is what we do not experience. It is
unchanging being. Our experience is not real, but constantly changing, becoming. What this
allows him to do is in fact to create an "unreal" reality in which ambiguity, creative imagination,
and uncertainty of human truth is superficially eliminated. Of course, there is no such thing as
"unreal' reality, so in truth the problematical still exists. Plato's Republic is a theoretical structure.
His theory of the human is unrealistic. It leaves out some essentials of humanness and so as a
model to be imitated has a tendency to create Marcuse's "one-dimensional man." Each of us is
suited to one task or mode of participation in the State. The Philosopher-King and Guardians
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will be able to determine our proper place and so our destiny, very neat, very simple. The
Republic is modeled after the "good," an abstract unambiguous, unchanging, monolithic reality.
In order for it to work, people within it would have to be convinced of the theory of the human on
which it rests. Stanley Diamond explains why the artist was seen as a threat to the State;
The artist does not believe in abstract systems; he deals with felt and ordered emotional
ideals and believes order is attained through the contradictions, the tense unities of
everyday experience. Thus, the artist himself may be unstable, a changeling, and this is
a threat to any establishment.42
On the other hand, the mathematician would fair much better as Plato's view of the ideal man
for the Ideal State. He emphasizes mathematics in the curriculum for the guardians. For him
"mathematics" has the shape of truth and can provide the solution to all problems. Here again a
particular concept of human nature is implied. And if people were in fact not like this, he would
make them so. He would fashion their minds to think the way they had to think to make his
mathematical equation." Because "numbers drag us toward Beingness."43 In other words there
were changes that he had to make in the cognitive habits (utamawazo) of the participants in the
culture if he was to succeed in the creation of the new order.
The New Dominant Mode
The birth of the archaic "European" utamawazo was accompanied and supported by the
introduction of the literate mode as the dominant and valued mode of expression in the culture.
The written mode preserved communication in an ever-increasingly precise form in what was to
become "Europe." Writing had been used much, much earlier in other cultures, but as in the
Kemetic MDW NTR (ancient "Egyptian Hieroglyphs"), it involved forms that symbolized much
more than sounds or objects. The MDW NTR contains transformational symbolism that
embodies African conceptions of universal and cosmic truths.44 It is an indication of the nature
of the European world-view and of course an example of the intensity of European cultural
nationalism that European scholars so consistently characterize the MDW NTR of Kemet as
being merely "concrete."45 This form of "reductionism" is an effort to oversimplify ancient African
writing, the earliest form of writing. It is an effort to make the MDW NTR appear conceptually
limited and sometimes contradictory. In truth, the MDW NTR was too complex for Plato's
purposes. He needed a modality that robbed the symbols of their "symbolic," their esoteric
content. They had to be disengaged from the cosmos.
It is important to understand the process by which the literate mode became dominant in the
culture and to understand exactly what is meant by the "literate mode" in this context. Although
for many centuries to come it was inaccessible to most of the population, it still had a valued
place in nascent, archaic, and feudalistic European society, and so greatly effected the shape of
the culture. We are describing a process of development, and because the development had a
"direction" does not mean that other characteristics were not identifiable. The poetic or, as Henri
and H. A. Frankfort call it the "mythopoetic" continued to exist among the vast majority of the
population, but it was relegated to a devalued position, implying inferiority of intellectual
capacity. That is why "the primitive," defined Eurocentrically, is always associated with a lack of
writing, and this is called being "pre-literate."
In nascent Europe the literate mode had ideological force. Remember that according to Platonic
epistemology we must achieve objectivity in order to know and that in his terms this is achieved
by causing our reason to dominate our emotions, which in turn gives us control. We gain control
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over that which we wish to know, therefore creating an "object" of knowledge. The mode of
preserved communication (which had characterized most cultures and which would prevail in
Greece centuries after Plato), was the poetic, the oral, and to some extent the symbolic mode,
although Greek culture was not nearly so well developed in that regard, borrowing from other
cultures their sacred and religious concepts. This mode relied on the identification of the knower
with the known. On powers of memorization, and familiarity of the listener/participant with the
subject-matter being used. The symbolic modes of the more ancient and developed civilizations
also required apprehension of abstractions, but these were not the rationalistic abstractions that
would come to dominate in European thought.
In the analysis of Eurocentric theorists it was this memory, this emotional identification and
"involvement" caused by the poetic, "oral," and "Homeric" mode that had limited "pre-Platonic"
man. This characterization thrusts us into yet another "split," another dichotomy of invidious
comparison. And with this another aspect of the supposed "superiority" of the European rears its
head. The "pre-Platonic" man (Havelock's term), whom Homer's epics represented and whom
they addressed, was in trouble according to Havelock. He is described as being "nonliterate,"
which of course has much more ideological force than just saying that he preferred the poetic
form. It surfaces as a weakness and inability to conceptualize, a negative characteristic. It
devalues him as a person. This "nonliterate," "pre-Platonic" person also picks up a host of the
characteristics, which, in the European world-view, are either valueless or absolutely negative.
Havelock describes the "Homeric man" as being a "sleeping" state, as though drugged. His
mind is governed by "uncritical acceptance," "self surrender," "automatism," "passivity of mental
condition," "lavish employment of emotions," "hypnotic trance," "complacency." He uses "dream
language" and is the victim of "illusion." He is in the "long sleep of man" and is even "lazy." 46
Why is Havelock so hard on those whom he places in intellectual opposition to Plato? It is as if
this stage in Greek history or European development must be destroyed; certainly thoroughly
repudiated. We will see in subsequent chapters of this study why these are precisely the terms
that Europeans use to describe and demean other cultures, cultures that are labeled "primitive."
And these are the terms they use to characterize the abilities of children of African descent and
other groups who are seen as lacking cultural and racial value within the societies in which
Europeans dominate. In fact, European academies "create" such nomininds.47 In each of these
instances, including Havelock's critique of the mental habits of humankind "before" Plato, the
statements made have ideological significance. They are supporting a chosen way of life, a set
of beliefs. The objective is to establish the "way of life" as superior to all which either preceded it
or that is different from it. It is the ideological nature of Platonic epistemology that makes this
possible: an epistemology dictated by the European asili, carried in the cultural genes.
For Plato, the poet does not appeal to the proper "principle" in the person or to the proper part
of his or her soul. And so the poet would not be able to help in the task of lifting us out of the
darkness of the cave and correcting our ignorance towards the "light" of truth. The poet
obstructs the proper functioning of reason and does not help us to gain control of our emotions.
The imitative poet…is not by nature made, nor is his art intended, to lease or to affect
the rational principle in the soul; but he will prefer the passionate and fitful temper, which
is easily imitated…his creations have an inferior degree of truth…and he is concerned
with an inferior part of the soul; and therefore we shall be right in refusing to admit him
into a well-ordered State, because he awakens and nourishes and strengthens the
feelings and impairs the reason. As in a city when the evil are permitted to have authority
and the good are put out of the way, so in the soul of the man, as we maintain, the
imitative implants an evil constitution, for he indulges the irrational nature which has no
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discernment of greater and less, but thinks the same thing at one time great and at
another small he is a manufacturer of images and is very far removed from the truth. 48
Plato's argument with the poets is that they do not foster the view of the State and of the "good"
of which he wants to convince people; of which they must be convinced in order for them to play
their parts well. The Republic is perfect because it is absolute. But what if human realities are
not absolute? Suppose there are ambiguities endemic to human existence? Plato solves this
problem by simply "eliminating" the ambiguous nature of our existential reality, by pretending
that it isn't there. Who, after all, is creating "illusion" and who is dealing with "reality?" The
philosophy underlying the Republic says that human beings fit into neat categories, that they are
each suited to specific tasks by nature, and will be happiest doing that for which they are best
suited and that such is best for the order of the whole. Isn't that convenient? Plato doesn't need
the poets "messing" up this picture—they won't help him sell his myth.
If the poets and the poetic in us is bad and backyard, certainly the other side of the coin is that
our better, more rational natures are brought out by the literate mode, the substitution of object
for symbol. When the literate mode dominates, we nurture a new and different mindset. That is
the important thing. That is the significance of Plato's work. Contrast Havelock's characterization
of this "new" man with that of the "old." The new man is governed by "self-conscious critical
intelligence," "individual and unique convictions," a "critical psyche," "inner stability," "inner
morality," and "calculated reflection." He is "self-governing," "emancipated," "reflective,"
"thoughtful," "self-organized," "calculative," "rational," "self-generated," "awakened,"
"stimulated," "thinking abstractly," and "autonomous." In the rhetoric of European value the deck
is clearly stacked. This "new" person is smart! What we see is the epistemological basis of the
conviction that literacy renders progressiveness and that when the literate mode becomes
valued and finally dominant, we have a "higher" form of culture in terms of European
civilizations, since that is where human being learned to be "critical,"
"indeed to think."
But the European is certainly not very "critical" if that means questioning the European world-
view as Plato inspired its configuration. The world of literacy, it is believed, is a world of
objectivity, a world of "impartial" truth. Oral media is "subjective." In it personality is merged with
tradition. How do we change this? "The fundamental signs enabled a reader to dispense with
emotional identification…."49 Plato urged a move away from "emotional involvement,"
"unquestioned precepts," and "imitation." (Today Habermas urges us away from predecisive
validity claims based on cultural tradition.50) Plato supposedly introduced "technical" learning
"on the highest level of consciousness."51 So while Plato is seeking to produce minds capable of
the "highest" form of thought, "nonliterate man" emerges as being barely able to "think" at all.
Indeed, we cannot be sure that he is even "conscious." And, what is more, this epistemology is
seen to have moral implications as well. The literate participant of the ideal state is more moral
because his ethics are subject to questioning, criticism, and analysis, while the earlier Greek
ethic was not. (Of course, once the "questioning" takes place in the Socratic dialectic, not too
much more "questioning" is necessary.) Within the logic of European nationalism these ideas
were to be later echoed in nineteenth century evolutionary theory where Victorian culture was
judged as the "highest" form, representing a more objectively valid moral state, the assumption
being that European values were arrived at "critically" and "rationally" and were therefore
universally valid. This was legacy form the "enlightenment," so-called.
Plato had set the stage for important ingredients of the European self-image. He sees himself
as a critical being, rational and in absolute control. His mission is to control and rationalize the
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world, and this he achieves through the illusion of objectivity. Plato himself must have been
something like this. Stanley Diamond draws a portrait:
He was it seems, a man of a certain type, incapable of tolerating ambiguity, intuitive in
his conviction of an objective, superhuman good…. He believed in logic with the cool
passion of a mathematician, and he believed, at least abstractly, that the perfectly just
city could be established, through perfectly rational and perfectly autocratic means.52
The desacralized written mode allowed the object to be "frozen," reified into a single meaning;
Kemetic MDW NTR is not of this nature:
The ordinary consideration of the Egyptian symbol reduces it to a primary, arbitrary,
utilitarian and singular meaning, whereas in reality it is a synthesis which requires great
erudition for its analysis and a special culture for the esoteric knowledge that it implies.53
R. A. Schwaller De Lubicz characterizes the MDW NTR in the following way, distinguishing
them from the merely literal mode: "symbolism," which is the application of a "state of mind," or,
again, a "mentality." "Symbolism is technique; the symbolic is the form of writing of a vital
philosophy."54 "The symbol is a sign that one must learn to read, and the symbolic is a form of
writing whose laws one must know; they have nothing in common with the grammatical
construction of our languages. It is a question here, not of what might be called "hieroglyphic
language," but of the symbolic, which is not an ordinary form of writing." De Lubicz is concerned
with describing "the principles that govern the symbol and the symbolic in the expression of a
vital philosophy, not a rationalistic philosophy." He says that there "exists no hieroglyphic
language, but only a hieroglyphic writing, which uses the symbol to lead us toward the
symbolic."55 The significance of these passages is that it affirms my belief that the MDW NTR of
Kemet does not represent a "primitive" form of secular or profane script and is not therefore
"pre-European." Rather, it represents a quite different view of reality—a mindset that sought to
understand the universe as cosmos, therefore careful not to attempt the separation of spirit and
matter. So that when we speak of the literate mode as championed by Plato, we mean to stress
a unique definition and use of that mode: one devoid of the "symbolic" in De Lubicz' sense. This
writing lacked something. It was only able to deal with "one-dimensional realities," and as
Diamond says,
It reduced the complexities of experience to the written word…with the advent of writing
symbols became explicit; they lost a certain richness. Man's word was no longer endless
exploration of reality, but a sign that could be used against him…writing splits
consciousness in two ways—it becomes more authoritative than talking thus degrading
the meaning of speech and eroding oral tradition; and it makes it possible to use works
for the political manipulation and control of others.56
It was not that this literal mode represented or led to higher truths, but that the claim was made
that it did and that it gave the illusion of having done so, making this medium useful. It worked! It
helped to control minds, values, and behavior, just as any media does, but in a new and for
some a "desirable" way. The written language was more impressive than speech. Platonic
epistemology achieved this once it was valued. Then speech came to imitate this writing, which
was no longer "magical," sacred, and truly symbolic. The permanence of the written word gave
it ideological strength. The permanence of the written word gave it ideological strength. Written
dialogues, written laws, and strangely enough, written prayers—the sacred reduced to profane
"scriptures"; all of this became evidence, for the European, of the superiority of his/her culture.
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15. RBG Blakademics November, 2010
Marimba Ani, Ph.D., is a veteran scholar, activist, and trained cultural scientist. She is a long
time associate of the legendary world-renowned Egyptologist and African scholar Dr. John
Henrik Clarke. She is a professor at The City University of New York's Hunter College and the
author of Let The Circle Be Unbroken.
References:
36. Havelock, Eric. Preface to Plato, Grosset and Dunlap, New York, 1967, p.197.
37. Bradley, Michael. The Iceman Inheritance, Warner Books, New York, 1978.
38. Sagan, Carl. The Dragons of Eden, Ballantine Books, New York, 1977.
39. Frankfort, Henri and H.A. "Myth and Reality," in The Intellectual Adventure of Ancient
Man, Frankfort et al. (eds.), University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1977, pp.14, 20, 21.
40. Habermas, Jurgen. Reason and the Rationalization of Society Vol. I, Beacon Press,
Boston,1984, p.70.
41. Ibid, p.74.
42. Diamond, Stanley. Searching for the Primitive, Transaction Press, New Brunswick, N.J.,
1974, p.192.
43. Havelock, p. 230.
44. Levi, J.B. The Ancient Egyptian Language: Pathway to Africa, unpublished paper, 1984.
45. Frankfort and Frankfort, H.A. pp. 3–27.
46. Havelock. pp. 120–210.
47. Wilson, Amos. "The Mis-education of Black Students," lecture at Hunter College, New
York, April 29, 1988.
48. Plato. Republic, Bk X:605.
49. Havelock. p. 208.
50. Havermas. p. 70.
51. Hall, Edward T. and Brown, J. "Plato's Republic as an early Study of Media Bias and a
Charter for Prosaic Education, "in American Anthropologist, 1973, Vol. 74., No. 3.
52. Dianond. p. 192.
53. De Lubicz, R. A. Schwaller. Symbol and the Symbolic, trans. Robert and Deborah
Lawlor, Autumn Press, Brookline, Mass., 1978, p. 55.
54. Ibid, p. 44.
55. Ibid, p. 27.
56. Diamond. pp. 3–4.
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