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Reality As Seen Through Traditional African Cosmology (1271 hits)


Reality As Seen Through Traditional African Cosmology
Junious Ricardo Stanton

“Though the (African) cosmologies appear to differ according to geography and regional histories, the degree to which they coincide in fundamental principles and function defines them as multiple expressions of a single cultural/cosmological construct.” The Sankofa Movement ReAfrikanization and the Reality of War by Kwame Agyei and Akua Nson Akoto page 166

Last week we addressed the idea of African cosmology. I said it was formulated in antiquity by our wise and talented ancestors who grappled with the deepest existential issues facing humanity, who were committed to cultivating and developing their peers’ highest potential. The origins of a unified and common African cosmology go way back into antiquity to the early development of humans.
“Cosmology refers to worldview and myths in general or, more specifically, to the cultural and religious imagery concerning the universe. African cosmology, which often takes the form of oral narratives, describes the web of human activities within the powerful spiritual cosmos; it transmits the beliefs and values of African peoples. African cosmology, then, is an attempt to describe and understand the origin and structure of the universe, how humans relate to the cosmos, and how and to what extent their thoughts and actions are shaped by it.” Encyclopedia of African Religion edited by Molefi Kete Asante and Ama Mazama page 178
In ancient KMT (Egypt), Djehuty was deified and worshipped as the god of wisdom, science, medicine, magic, mathematics and measurement. Notice how Djehuty’s persona reflected the same holistic African perspective we find throughout the continent. Djehuty was envisioned as esoteric as well as practical combining: wisdom, science, and magic with useful day to day physical endeavors like healing, communications, mathematics and measurement. This is the utilitarian essence of continental African cosmology, philosophy and metaphysics, blending the spiritual with the mundane to enhance the lives of the people.
Throughout the continent and in the ancient world African cosmologies emphasized the nexus between SPIRIT and material temporal world as the true reality. Africans and aboriginal people, unlike Neanderthals and Caucasoids, are a deeply spiritual people. We knew intuitively a self existing divine consciousness was behind all creation and this consciousness also animated and invigorated the universe with an omnipresent energy, pulse, purpose, order and symmetry.
This energy is called animatism. “Animatism, not to be confused with animism, is the belief in a supernatural power that animates all living things in an impersonal sense. It is therefore not individualized or specialized in terms of a particular object, such as one finds in animism, but is a rather more generalized belief in an invisible, powerfully impersonal energy that is everywhere… Derived from the same Latin root as animism, the term animatism was meant to differentiate the individual spirit in animate and inanimate objects from the more generalized belief in the active spirit of the universe. One cannot grant any ethical or moral quality to this active spirit because it is neither good nor evil, neither right nor wrong, but everywhere present and therefore inherently dangerous if it is violated. Some have described it by the electricity metaphor; it is everywhere and it can bring harm, but it is not moral or immoral; it is amoral. Although one may find animatism and animism in the same culture, they must be distinguished as concepts. Animism may be said to have personality Animatism and animatism is impersonal; whereas animism shows us individuals with special spiritual characteristics or traits, animatism simply exists as a force in the universe in a generalized sense” Encyclopedia of African Religion edited by Molefi Kete Asante and Ama Mazama pages 57 and 58
Unfortunately most of what we know about Africa and Africans we have received from non-Africans who had/have a bias and hostility towards Africa and its people. The good news is more and more warrior scholars are coming to the rescue and providing the truth about Africa, its genius and accomplishments. When we view Africa and its people through the lens of historical truth we see not only are the people ingenious and innovative they set the bar extremely high for the rest of humanity.
Africans defined their reality, their origin and the beginnings of the cosmos as an expression and extension of a divine mind or consciousness with an intelligence and energy pulsating within an unlimited range of frequencies containing male and female attributes often in seeming contradiction but which are in fact the ultimate cause of the universe’s existence, being and sustainability. These ideas are essentially the same in every African ethno-cultural system. “Each of the traditional cultural systems nonetheless provides for a single creator who is a singularity and multiplicity simultaneously.” The Sankofa Movement ReAfrikanization and the Reality of War by Kwame Agyei and Akua Nson Akoto page 167
As we mentioned last week one of the essential principles of Hermeticism (an ancient African cosmology) is the principle of polarity; it states, “Everything is dual, everything has poles and everything has its pair of opposites; Like and unlike are the same; Opposites are identical in nature, but different in degree; Extremes meet; All truths, are but half-truths; All paradoxes may be reconciled.” The Kybalion
In his book Person, Divinity and Nature A Modern View of The Person and the Cosmos In African Thought, Chukwunyere Kamalu says it this way, “More important from the point of view of the structure of the African worldview is the fact that ancient and traditional African beliefs incorporate all the concepts of monotheism (belief in one god) polytheism (belief in many gods/forces/spirits) and animism and pantheism (belief that the supreme being resides within everything and that therefore everything has some form of spiritual being or consciousness) African beliefs cannot therefore be described as being exclusively monotheistic, polytheistic or pantheistic.” page 146.
There is no shame or confusion in the African cosmological game. It is the essence of what the late scholar Mzee Jedi Shemsu Jehewty aka Jacob Hudson Carruthers, Jr. referred to as African deep thought! Indeed it is profound and insightful as the West is reluctantly discovering. It is real. In effect ancient African notions of reality based upon underlying, interpenetrating, interconnected codependent spirituality are being proven despite the benighted and strictly materialistic leanings of others.

-30-
Posted By: Junious Stanton
Sunday, October 27th 2019 at 12:31PM
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Brother Doctor Junious Ricardo Stanton, here's what I got from this article entitled: Reality As Seen Through Traditional African Cosmology.

Traditional African Cosmology is traditionally a African perception of reality as to the whole of or the universe and our place with in it.

Thank You Brother Doctor Junious Ricardo Stanton for this enlighten and inspirational look back to the way our ancestors looked at ancient cosmology on how the Universe was created. Our ancestors knew that the universe began and ends with divine unity, the believe in one God and this belief in ONE GOD is still true to this day.

.




Sunday, October 27th 2019 at 3:48PM
Dea. Ron Gray Sr.
African cosmology also emphasizes that SPIRIT as the central dynamic within the universe in everything both animate and inanimate that this SPIRIT/energy is intelligent, purposeful and omnipresent too vast to be fully comprehended by humans.
Sunday, October 27th 2019 at 6:37PM
Junious Stanton
WOW!!! Just to think, this level of intelligence came from our (African) ancestors, people who was believed to be primitive in there way of live and thinking.

I learn something new, everyday.




Sunday, October 27th 2019 at 9:29PM
Dea. Ron Gray Sr.
The people who lied about Africa and Africans did/do so because they have deeply rooted psychological issues stemming from their feelings of inadequacy about their lack of melanin, their real place in history and their culture so they constructed a delusional self-image (racism white supremacy) and historiography to compensate. It is our obligation to discover our true history greatness and to teach it to our people.
Sunday, October 27th 2019 at 10:17PM
Junious Stanton
I don't think the Chinese had any sense of inadequacy about their melanin content when they discovered the world's most accurate cosmology, the buddha's cosmology.

Sunday, October 27th 2019 at 11:05PM
Steve Williams
No one cares what you think since it it based upon ignorance. The first Chinese dynasty was founded by Blacks. http://realhistoryww.com/world_history/anc... The Buddha was a Black man. From a historical perspective India and Asia (as was the rest of the world) before the Aryan invasions were populated by Black people! The Asian concept of Karma is similar to the Hermetic Principle of Cause and Effect which came long before the Asian notion was articulated The main take away is these ideas of cosmology and philosophy formulated by indigenous and aboriginal Black people predate Indo-European (Aryan) or white philosophies by thousands of years.
Monday, October 28th 2019 at 10:45AM
Junious Stanton
Interesting.


Monday, October 28th 2019 at 11:39AM
Dea. Ron Gray Sr.
What is interesting Ron? Did you read at the link?

Monday, October 28th 2019 at 12:31PM
Steve Williams
In their chronology, the Yangshao is indeed the original culture, but they attribute the Xia to the Longshan. Interestingly, no mention is made of different ethnicity's, and no evidence is offered to prove that the Xia enslaved the Mongols.

"Interestingly, no mention is made of different ethnicities"

Monday, October 28th 2019 at 12:39PM
Steve Williams
Steve, it is interesting because I am enjoying this conversation. Now since you want some history, did you click on The link that was provided by Brother Doctor Junious Ricardo Stanton?


Monday, October 28th 2019 at 5:13PM
Dea. Ron Gray Sr.
I did Ron. I thought you might want to talk about it. You know me, I'm always interested in the proof. I believe the Buddha lived much later than the time when homo sapiens spread from Africa around the world. I think the Chinese by the time of the Buddha, had evolved from the African type to the Asian. Do you know what the "swastika" that appears on the Buddha's chest in the woodblock print means?

Monday, October 28th 2019 at 6:13PM
Steve Williams
Deacon, Steve Williams is rarely interested in facts, only perpetuating his notions and ideas which are all too often off topic, Eurocentric and ahistorical. If he wants proof here are numerous sites he should visit like : https://atlantablackstar.com/2014/06/20/th... and http://en.lisapoyakama.org/the-first-inhab...
I encourage sincerely interested readers to read: When The World Was Black volumes 1 and 2 by Supreme Understanding ISBN: 978-1-935721-37-6 and 978-1-64007-986-1 Both are available via Amazon or at https://supremedesignonline.com/product-ca... Or visit this Website http://www.realhistoryww.com.
The Steve Williams of the world want to maintain the status quo of Western domination which is coming to an end as the laws/ principles of : mentality, correspondence, polarity,rhythm, cause and effect and gender play themselves out on this plane.
Monday, October 28th 2019 at 7:01PM
Junious Stanton
Junious, what does the "swastika" on the Buddha's chest represent?

Monday, October 28th 2019 at 7:37PM
Steve Williams
It signifies auspiciousness and good fortune Steve.


Monday, October 28th 2019 at 9:27PM
Dea. Ron Gray Sr.
It is also said to mean prosperity,eternity and the mind of the Buddha. The Buddha is an honorific title meaning "enlighten one" just a Christ is an honorific title. Notice how Steve Williams always goes off topic and deflects from the original issues written about or raised. That is why I don't spend too much time dealing with him Oh and by the way, Siddhartha Gautama who was called the Buddha was a Black man with curly hair.
Monday, October 28th 2019 at 10:35PM
Junious Stanton
My dictionary says it means in Sanskrit, svastika, be well; symbol of unlimited merit and good fortune; one of the physical marks of a buddha, often placed iconographically on chest (i.e. heart), feet, or palms. Junious, if the Buddha is a "black man", from whence did he bring this symbol and meaning?



Tuesday, October 29th 2019 at 10:29AM
Steve Williams
I'm sure most readers have noticed how Williams attempts to high-jack the discussion, take it off topic and assert himself as a knowledgeable person. Notice also he is unable to refute the information presented here other than to fall back on his Aryan propaganda. If you keep looking you will find the symbol has many meanings in other parts of the world. Williams' diversion is not going to negate the fact India , modern day Iran, Turkey and Asia prior to the coming of the Aryans and Mongols were inhabited by Black skinned people of various sizes and phenotype. End of discussion. The symbol and Buddha are not mutually exclusive it may be an Aryan esoteric symbol (or not) but the Buddhists used it in a differing manner. http://www.porchlight.ca/~blackdog/swastik...
Tuesday, October 29th 2019 at 12:30PM
Junious Stanton
At this last link at the bottom of the page are two busts of the Buddha. Junious, is that African hair on their heads, or some kind of hair-do, or both or neither? And what is an Aryan, versus other Indian races?

Tuesday, October 29th 2019 at 1:28PM
Steve Williams
And are the Indians, "blackmen?"

Tuesday, October 29th 2019 at 1:30PM
Steve Williams
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