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TO BE OR NOT TO BE “SUBTLY” PHILOSOPHICALLY COLONIZED*1 1 I would like to thank Amanda Moreira, Irene Olivero and the anonymous referees of Kriterion for valuable comments on previous versions of this essay.

SER OU NÃO SER “SUTILMENTE” COLONIZADO FILOSOFICAMENTE

ABSTRACT

An often-adopted use of the predicate, “to be colonized”, is one that applies it loosely, not in reference to original Africans or indigenous people enslaved by Europeans or heirs of enslaved persons, but to academics who are citizens of former colonies like Brazil, their ways of thinking, philosophical works, academic communities, etc. But under what conditions one is to do that? And how can one avoid the attribution of such predicate to oneself or one’s works? These issues have not received much attention. While dialoguing with authors associated with decolonial studies, Brazilian, continental and analytic philosophers, this essay aims to contribute to change this situation. It does so by proposing an alternative use of the predicate, “to be ‘subtly’ philosophically colonized”, according to which this predicate is to be applied to philosophical works that have the thirteen features described in the essay or at least most of them. It is argued that this alternative use is to be endorsed because it is: precise; exemplified in a detailed way by at least one philosophical work; and “inexplosive” in not suggesting the “explosive” claim that practically all Western philosophical works are colonized by Western metaphysics.

Keywords
Coloniality; Decoloniality; Conditions; Predicate-attribution; Brazilian philosophy

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