The Social Burden of Witchcraft accusation and Its Victims: An Exercise in Philosophy

The killing and burning of witches in contemporary era seem to be unabated. The contemporary minds have not succeeded in ‘scienticising’ belief in witchcraft. In Africa, Canada and India, the incidence, accusations and extrajudicial sanctions against witches are routine. The phenomenon of witchcraf...

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Main Author: Olusegun Stephen Taiwo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: LibraryPress@UF 2021-12-01
Series:Yoruba Studies Review
Online Access:https://ojs.test.flvc.org/ysr/article/view/130117
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author Olusegun Stephen Taiwo
author_facet Olusegun Stephen Taiwo
author_sort Olusegun Stephen Taiwo
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description The killing and burning of witches in contemporary era seem to be unabated. The contemporary minds have not succeeded in ‘scienticising’ belief in witchcraft. In Africa, Canada and India, the incidence, accusations and extrajudicial sanctions against witches are routine. The phenomenon of witchcraft is justified to be real. Before a misfortune could be plausibly attributed to witchcraft, it had to be seen as the outcome of a certain type of social situation. For in a witch-case the suspect was usually a person who had been involved in a relationship of real or presumed hostility towards the victim, then an accusation of witchcraft originated with someone living in close proximity to the suspect, and was meant to explain some local and personal misfortune. We then explain the socialization of witchcraft accusation in terms of the immediate social environment of the witch and her accuser. What we have in mind is that there are a lot of socialization between the witch and her victims in such a way that witches do not attack stranger and the victim can easily guess who is socially responsible for his/her misfortunes. We shall argue therefore, that once we are able to explain witchcraft causal reasonable explanation, the kind of metaphysical change of mind on witchcraft and the subsequent incidence, accusations and extrajudicial sanctions against witches would be reduced.
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series Yoruba Studies Review
spelling doaj-art-65b03173aa3547ab81c9add16c5d42602025-02-07T13:44:50ZengLibraryPress@UFYoruba Studies Review2473-47132578-692X2021-12-0151.2The Social Burden of Witchcraft accusation and Its Victims: An Exercise in Philosophy Olusegun Stephen Taiwo 0Adekunle Ajasin University The killing and burning of witches in contemporary era seem to be unabated. The contemporary minds have not succeeded in ‘scienticising’ belief in witchcraft. In Africa, Canada and India, the incidence, accusations and extrajudicial sanctions against witches are routine. The phenomenon of witchcraft is justified to be real. Before a misfortune could be plausibly attributed to witchcraft, it had to be seen as the outcome of a certain type of social situation. For in a witch-case the suspect was usually a person who had been involved in a relationship of real or presumed hostility towards the victim, then an accusation of witchcraft originated with someone living in close proximity to the suspect, and was meant to explain some local and personal misfortune. We then explain the socialization of witchcraft accusation in terms of the immediate social environment of the witch and her accuser. What we have in mind is that there are a lot of socialization between the witch and her victims in such a way that witches do not attack stranger and the victim can easily guess who is socially responsible for his/her misfortunes. We shall argue therefore, that once we are able to explain witchcraft causal reasonable explanation, the kind of metaphysical change of mind on witchcraft and the subsequent incidence, accusations and extrajudicial sanctions against witches would be reduced. https://ojs.test.flvc.org/ysr/article/view/130117
spellingShingle Olusegun Stephen Taiwo
The Social Burden of Witchcraft accusation and Its Victims: An Exercise in Philosophy
Yoruba Studies Review
title The Social Burden of Witchcraft accusation and Its Victims: An Exercise in Philosophy
title_full The Social Burden of Witchcraft accusation and Its Victims: An Exercise in Philosophy
title_fullStr The Social Burden of Witchcraft accusation and Its Victims: An Exercise in Philosophy
title_full_unstemmed The Social Burden of Witchcraft accusation and Its Victims: An Exercise in Philosophy
title_short The Social Burden of Witchcraft accusation and Its Victims: An Exercise in Philosophy
title_sort social burden of witchcraft accusation and its victims an exercise in philosophy
url https://ojs.test.flvc.org/ysr/article/view/130117
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