Placide Tempels
Placide Frans Tempels, OFM (18 February 1906 – 9 October 1977) was a Belgian Franciscan missionary in the Congo who became famous for his book Bantu Philosophy.
The Reverend Placide Tempels | |
---|---|
Born | Frans Tempels 18 February 1906 |
Died | 9 October 1977 71) | (aged
Nationality | Belgian |
Occupation(s) | missionary, writer |
Life
Tempels was born in Berlaar, Belgium. Born Frans Tempels, he took the name "Placide" on his entry into a Franciscan seminary in 1924. After his ordination to the priesthood in 1930 he taught for a short time in Belgium before being posted to the Belgian Congo (now the Democratic Republic of the Congo) in 1933. He stayed there for twenty-nine years, broken by only two short stays back in Belgium. In April 1962 he returned to live in a Franciscan monastery in Hasselt, where he died in 1977.
Bantu Philosophy
Though neither African nor a philosopher, Tempels had a huge influence on African philosophy through the publication in 1945 of his book La philosophie bantoue, published in the English language in 1959 as Bantu Philosophy.
Philosophie bantoue
Also in 1945, the Philosophie bantoue was published by Father Placide Tempels and immediately triggered a voracious debate among African philosophers, including Alexis Kagame and Mubabinge Bilolo. Paulin Hountondji disdainfully called Tempels' ideas ethnophilosophies and as such nothing more than a classical ethnological study of Africa and its peoples.[1]
References
- Geoffrey Lloyd; Renaud Gagné; Simon Goldhill, eds. (2017). Regimes of Comparatism: Frameworks of Comparison in History, Religion and Anthropology. Brill. p. 407. ISBN 9789004387638.