Harris, Ch., Bavaresco, A. Revista de Filosofía, Nº 99, 2021-3, pp. 429 - 447                                                   434 
 
Esta obra está bajo una licencia de Creative Commons Atribución-CompartirIgual 4.0 Internacional 
(CC BY-SA 4.0) 
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/deed.es 
 
b)  The Identity of the People: It is a challenge for Latin America to find identity. The 
Iberians imposed a colonial unity, but after Africans were brought to South America, the 
question of identity and the discussion of the rights of Amerindians, later African slaves, 
extended to Iberian born versus American born European. The issue became critical during 
the period of independence. On the one hand, there was who defended nations of population 
that was  diverse in race, culture, and  origin. They proposed a national unity based on a 
mixed population under ideals of political self-determination, such as Bolivar and Marti. On 
the  other  hand,  after  independence,  positivist  philosophers,  like  Sarmiento,  advocated 
policies that favored European immigration as a path to development and progress. These 
policies  were  based  on  a  negative  view  of  Amerindians  and  Africans.  But  the  failure  of 
positivist ideas opened up the unity of mixing the various races  that  make  up  the  Latin 
American  populations  (see  Vasconselos  and  Zea),  that  is,  the  cultural  unity  of  these 
populations provided the basis for Latin American identity (see Gracia/Vargas, 2018, p. 15). 
  
c) Philosophical Anthropology: In Latin America, the positivist approach had a strong 
influence  on  the  scientific  conception  of  the  human  being.  Against  this  view  are  the 
antipositivists  who  developed  philosophical  anthropology  in  three  trends:  a  vitalist 
anthropology, an anthropology  of  the spirit and an  existentialist  / Marxist (see  Gracia  / 
Vargas, p. 15). The vitalist view was influenced by Bergson, who argued that the human being 
is conscience, does not mean a deterministic or mechanistic view of the world. The main 
followers were: Vaz Ferreira (Uruguay), Alejandro Deústua (Peru), Antonio Caso (Mexico), 
Enrique Molina (Chile) and Alejandro Korn (Argentina).  
 
Ortega  y  Gasset's  visit  to  South  America  introduced  a  different  approach  to 
philosophical  anthropology  based  on  Husserl,  Dilthey,  Scheler  and  Hartman.  The  most 
important defenders of this vision were Samuel Ramos (Mexico), Francisco Romero and 
Risieri Frondizi (Argentina), Francisco Miró Quesada (Peru) and Leopoldo Zea (Mexico). 
Existentialism  /  Marxism  grew  from  the  1950s  to  the  1960s,  with  the  most  important 
philosophers  being  Carlos  Astrada  (Argentina),  Vicente  Ferreira  da  Silva  (Brazil).  (see 
Gracia / Vargas, 2018, p. 16). 
 
d) Latin America’s Philosophical Identity: The question is to know what your identity 
consists of or if you have any special and original characteristics. There are at least four 
different  approaches:  universalist,  culturalist,  critical  and  ethnic.  1)  Universalist  means 
similar to science or has science as a model. In this case, philosophy needs to be universalist, 
that  is,  its  problems,  method  and  conclusions  are  common,  regardless  of  particular 
circumstances.  This  is  the  deficit  of  the  LAP,  according  to  some  philosophers.  2)  For 
culturalist thinkers, the truth is from a perspective and depends on a point of view, that is, 
the  method  depends  on  a  cultural  context.  “Philosophy  is  a  historical  company,  not  a 
scientific  one,  concerned  with  the  elaboration  of  a  general  point  of  view  from  a  certain 
personal  or  cultural  perspective  (Garcia  /  Vargas,  2018,  p.  17).  3)  The  critical  approach 
considers philosophy a result of  social  conditions,  that  is, the educational infrastructure 
(universities,  departments,  etc.)  and  the  constitution  of  a  philosophical  community  of