Aesthetics and National Development Journal of Culture, Society and Development
Main Article Content
Abstract
Aesthetics refers to the study or science of beauty whereas development has to do with all-round progress in all cultural, economic, political, social life, and so on whether at the human or societal level. National development, then, is the progress made by a nation in its strive for self sustainable growth; it is all-encompassing as it deals with the total man and total nation in all areas of life without exception. In fact, it is total development which, of course, is itself dependent on the level of development of individuals that make up the nation. In this paper we intend to show the relationship between aesthetics and national development, and maintain that development itself is a beautiful phenomenon to behold.
Downloads
Article Details
Issue
Section

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
All materials deposited in the Afrischolar Discovery Repository are made openly available under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0), unless otherwise indicated.
Under this license, users are free to:
- Share — copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format
- Adapt — remix, transform, and build upon the material for any purpose, including commercial use
These freedoms are granted provided that appropriate credit is given to the original author(s), a link to the license is included, and any changes made are clearly indicated. Attribution must not suggest endorsement by the author(s) or the repository.
Authors retain full copyright of their work while granting Afrischolar Discovery Repository a non-exclusive license to store, preserve, and disseminate the content for academic and public use.
Users must not apply legal terms or technological measures that legally restrict others from exercising the rights permitted by the license.
Where third-party content is included, users are responsible for ensuring compliance with the applicable licensing terms for such materials.
By submitting content to the Afrischolar Discovery Repository, contributors affirm that they have the right to distribute their work under the CC BY 4.0 license.
For full license details, visit: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
How to Cite
References
Akpan, E. and U. Etuk. (1990) Aesthetics: Philosophical and Artistic Dimensions. Uyo: Modern Business Press.
Anyim, N. (1999) "Philosophy and Nigeria's Development: Analysis" in Agbafor Igwe (Ed.) Philosophy and National Development: A Periscope of the Next Millennium Uyo: MEF.
Blocker, G and H. William. (1974) Introduction to Philosophy. New York: D Van Nostrand Company.
Etuk, U. (2007) Philosophy of Relevance and the Relevance of Philosophy. 16th Inaugural Lecture Delivered in the University of Uyo, Uyo, 2007.
Etuk, U. (2009) Aesthetics, the New Media and National Development. 1st Professor Emmanuel Akpan Memorial Lecture. Uno: University of Uyo.
Idang, G. E. (2007) "Aesthetics: A Brief Historical Survey." In Ozuma and Yekini (Eds.) Landmarks in Aesthetic Studies: A Book of Readings. Makurdi: Microteacher and Associates.
Igwe, A. (1999) "A Survey of the Role of Philosophy in National Development from Ancient to Modern Times"
in A. Igwe (Ed.) Philosophy and National Development: A Periscope of the Next Millennium. Uyo: MEF.
Moore, B. and K. Bruder (1999). Philosophy: The Power of Ideas. California: Mayfield Publishers.
Offiong, D. (1980) Imperialism and Dependency: Obstacles to African Development. Enugu: Fourth Dimension Press.
Ozumba, G. (2007) "What is Aesthetics?" in Ozumba and Yekini (eds) Landmarks in Aesthetic Studies: A Book of Readings. Makurdi: Microteacher and Associates.
Rodney, W. (1972). How Europe Underdeveloped Africa. London: Boggle.
The New Encyclopedia Britannica (1992). Vol. 13, Chicago: Encyclopedia Britannica Inc. Titus, H. and M. Smith. (1974) Living Issues in Philosophy. New York: D Van Nostrand.