Sahara–Sahel Belt
Philosophers of Sahara–Sahel Belt
Showing 5 of 5 philosophers.

Albert Camus
1913 CE – 1960 CE
Mondovi (Dréan), Algeria
French-Algerian writer and philosopher of the absurd whose novels, essays, plays, and public interventions explored meaning, revolt, justice, solidarity, and life without transcendental consolation.

Aristippus of Cyrene
435 BCE – 356 BCE
Cyrene
Greek Socratic philosopher from Cyrene who founded the Cyrenaic school, made present pleasure central to ethics, emphasized immediate experience, and shaped ancient debates over hedonism and practical freedom.

Augustine of Hippo
354 CE – 430 CE
Tagaste, Numidia
North African Latin Christian philosopher and bishop from Tagaste and Hippo whose accounts of memory, time, will, grace, evil, signs, love, political order, and the Trinity reshaped late antique, medieval, Christian, and modern philosophy.

Carneades of Cyrene
214 BCE – 129 BCE
Cyrene (Cyrenaica)
Cyrenaic Greek Academic skeptic who led the New Academy, challenged Stoic certainty, developed the pithanon as practical guidance, argued on both sides of disputed questions, and made suspension of assent central to Hellenistic epistemology.

Jacques Derrida
1930 CE – 2004 CE
El Biar, Algiers, French Algeria
French Algerian philosopher of deconstruction whose analyses of writing, differance, trace, hospitality, law, archives, ethics, politics, and metaphysics reshaped twentieth-century continental philosophy and critical theory.