Skip to main content Skip to main navigation menu Skip to site footer
Page Header Logo
  • Current
  • Archives
  • About
    • About the Journal
    • Submissions
    • Editorial Team
    • Privacy Statement
    • Contact
Search
  • Register
  • Login
  1. Home /
  2. Archives /
  3. Vol. 4 No. 3 (2020)

Vol. 4 No. 3 (2020)

Published: 2021-01-27

Articles

  • PHILOSOPHY AND THE QUESTION OF THE INDISSOLUBILITY OF NIGERIA: ADDRESSING THE CRITICAL ISSUES OF THE NIGERIAN STATE
    GODWIN OKANEME, PhD
    • PDF
  • SOLIPSISM, PRIVATE LANGUAGE, AND THE KNOWLEDGE OF OTHER MINDS: IMPLICATIONS FOR INTERSUBJECTIVITY
    OKORO, CHARLES KENECHUKWU
    • PDF
  • THOREAU'S CONCEPT OF CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE AS A PANECEA AGAINST UNJUST STATE IN NIGERIA
    DR. OBINNA VICTOR OBIAGWU, DONATUS UZOMA OKWARA
    • PDF
  • NZE NA OZO TITLE IN IGBO CULTURE: A PHILOSOPHICAL REFLECTION ON ITS SIGNIFICANCE IN A CONTEMPORARY SOCIETY
    EJIKEMEUWA J. O. NDUBISI, PhD, JOSEPH EJIMOGU OKERE
    • PDF
  • NO HUMAN NATURE, NO OBJECTIVE VALUE: A CRITIQUE OF SARTRE'S EXISTENTIALISM
    JOHNSON UGOCHUKWU OFOEGBU PhD, UMEADI KINGSLEY MARIO-BRUNO CHUKWUMEZIEREM (Omd)
    • PDF
  • THE FUTURE AND SURVIVAL OF AFRICAN PHILOSOPHY AS A GENRE
    Ntui, Victor Ntui, Ph.D.
    • PDF
  • AN EXPLORATION OF PANTALEON IROEGBU'S PEDAGOGY OF NKUZIOLOGY FOR CONTEMPORARY AFRICA
    IRABOR, Benson Peter, OLUFOWOBI, Oludare Okikiola, PhD
    • PDF
  • EDUCATION AND SUSTAINABLE NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
    JOSEPH EJIMOGU OKERE, OFOEGO, CHINYERE O.
    • PDF
  • AN APPRAISAL OF MIGRATION AND THE ISSUE OF AFRICAN IDENTITY
    Oludare Gladys Oluwatosin, Owoyemi Deborah Oluwasola
    • PDF
  • HUMAN NATURE IN KARL MARX: A CRITICAL ANALYSIS
    Okpanachi Elijah Ojochonu, PhD
    • PDF
  • MATTHEW LIPMAN'S PHILOSOPHY OF CATCH THEM YOUNG: AN IMPERATIVE FOR MORAL AND NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT IN NIGERIA
    Olubanjo-Olufowobi, Olufunso
    • PDF
Language
  • English
  • Deutsch
  • Français (France)
Information
  • For Readers
  • For Authors
  • For Librarians
About this Publishing System