The Philosophy of the Yoruba

verifiedCite
While every effort has been made to follow citation style rules, there may be some discrepancies. Please refer to the appropriate style manual or other sources if you have any questions.
Select Citation Style
Feedback
Corrections? Updates? Omissions? Let us know if you have suggestions to improve this article (requires login).
Thank you for your feedback

Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.

External Websites

From the oral culture of its distant past to its vibrant present and buoyed by its scholarly discourses, Yoruba philosophy is best understood as a folk philosophy, a set of narratives and cultural practices that attempt to explain the causes and the nature of things affecting the corporeal and the spiritual universe.

The Yoruba people, who number more than 30 million on the African continent and many millions in their diaspora, inhabit a world of myths, allegories, poetry, and the love and wisdom of the Ifa divination system. Those are just a few of the components of Yoruba culture, the genesis of which is the holy city of Ile-Ife, Nigeria. They serve to remind the Yoruba of a past that has survived through oral tradition. From that foundation have Yoruba philosophy, religion, and literature developed, all of which blend ancient truths and divine moralities with reason.

Prominent Yoruba scholars, intellectuals, leaders, and others—among them Samuel Adjai Crowther, Obafemi Awolowo, Wole Soyinka, Wande Abimbola, Sophie Oluwole, Toyin Falola, Lusiah Teish, Abiola Irele, Stephen Adebanji Akintoye, Kola Abimbola, and Jacob Olupona—have analyzed and weighed the theory that the ancient hero and deity Oduduwa is the founder of the Yoruba nation, the bringer of light to the Yoruba people, and the pioneer of Yoruba philosophy. This discussion is a continuing one, and it is vital to understanding Yoruba philosophy.

Yoruba philosophy is rich in aphorisms and proverbs. It is also committed to a search for love and wisdom, which is evident in the first novel published in the Yoruba language—D.O. Fagunwa’s Ogboju Ode Ninu Igbo Irunmale (1938). In his novel, as in many of his other literary works, Fagunwa blended fantastic fables with folk philosophy and religion, and it reflects the admixture of happy and unhappy imaginings he found within himself. E. Bolaji Idowu took a similar focus in Olódùmaré: God in Yoruba Belief, a work of theology; its research was carried out in 1955, and the book was published in 1962. More than any book of or about the Yoruba in the 20th century, Olódùmaré succeeded in combining religion with philosophy and literature. It makes clear that any lore that widens people’s horizons is the beginning of philosophy. Olódùmaré also underscores that Yoruba philosophy is a folk philosophy that valorizes the Yoruba people’s cardinal virtues—namely, love, morality, temperance, honesty, honour, bravery, justice, prudence, and fortitude.

The word for head in Yoruba—ori—carries physical and spiritual connotations that cannot be separated. The ori defines the body; other parts of the body are answerable to it. The ori holds the body’s knowledge and is its destiny. Yoruba philosophy cannot exist without an ori. In a similar vein, Yoruba philosophy can be considered antecedent to Yoruba religion, in the same manner that every idea comes from the head before going into action.

Ifa divination may not be common in other African philosophies, but it is for the Yoruba people an oasis of wisdom, love, and morality. It is a fulcrum that is independent of Western or Asian philosophy. Complex and indispensable, Ifa divination is an integral component of Yoruba culture. Ifa divination is made explicit through its babaláwo, he who is versed in the knowledge and wisdom of the unknown—a philosopher steeped in his love for nature, in the use of herbs, and in the ways of the countryside. For Yoruba culture to be analytically meaningful, there must be Ifa divination, just as there must be the ori. Thus, a Yoruba writer is dependent on that fulcrum. Someone who writes on Yoruba religion can thus be called a religio-philosopher. Similar conclusions follow: someone who writes on Yoruba literature can be identified as a literary philosopher. Someone who writes on Yoruba philosophy can be referred to as a philosopher even if his or her work is imbued with elements of religion and literature. But the word philosopher itself is a complicated one, torn as it is between a sense of the Western-trained philosopher and of the babaláwo. Wande Abimbola embodies those complexities, and his book Ifá Will Mend Our Broken World (1997) demonstrates that, if one truly knows Ifa divination, one will easily find peace of mind and success in life.

The ori is the foundation of Yoruba philosophy, and a Yoruba philosopher will be reluctant to separate it from destiny, just as a Yoruba religio-philosopher will feel reluctant to separate himself from divination. Through Ifa divination, the ori and its essence appear in every spoken and unspoken word of the Yoruba people. To them and for them, the ori is the definition of the entire body. It is the foundation, the fulcrum, the taproot.

Get Unlimited Access
Try Britannica Premium for free and discover more.
Yemi D. Ogunyemi