Filosofia Theoretica

Volume 11, Issue 4, December 2022

African Perspectives on God, the Problem of Evil, and Meaning in Life

Ada Agada
Pages 9-30

The Human Being, God, and Moral Evil

The evidence of human wickedness in the world is so transparent that no rational person can dispute its reality. This paper approaches the question of the human person from an African philosophical perspective and explores the relation between the apparently free-acting human being and God conceived as the creator of the world and the ultimate cause of the human being. The paper will proffer answers to the following question: to what extent can the human being be absolved of blame for the evil they perpetrate in a world conceived in African traditional religion and thought as the creation of a high deity who could have foreseen the negative bent of human nature and should have made human nature inclined to goodness all of the time? The paper will make novel contributions to the debate about human nature in African philosophical discourse by recasting the human being as a homo melancholicus, or melancholy being, whose evil inclination in the world can best be understood in the context of a tragic vision of reality. Keywords: Human being, God, moral evil, freedom, omnipotence, omniscience, homo melancholicus, free will, determinism, destiny