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William Shakespeare

Critically discuss the categories of cross-cultural cognition and the African condition in Emeywo Biakolo, Do you agree with him that what the West calls an ingenuity was about race? Argue for your position.

O Muse, thou lofty spirit of the mind, I ponder deep the premise that doth entwine the threads of culture and the essence of the human spirit, as espoused by Emeywo Biakolo in his discourse upon the frayed tapestry of cross-cultural cognition, a realm where notions of ingenuity and the complex African condition dost interlace. In this grand theatre, where the shadows of imperialist thought oft overcast the brilliance of diverse intellects, we must question, nay, interrogate, whether the Western canon’s celebration of ingenuity is naught but a masked reflection of ancient biases once steeped in the fabric of race. For, in the very marrow of creation, the seeds of wisdom bloom in every corner of our globe, yet the light of recognition haveth often been dimmed by the specter of prejudice. Thus, I argue, in fervent discourse, that ingenuity, that divine spark of invention and thought, manifests itself not from the soil of racial delineation, but rather from the boundless wellspring of human experience, where all men, regardless of hue, may sip the nectar of innovation and claim their rightful place in the annals of history. To mark an entire race with a brush of genius or lack thereof is to fashion chains of folly, binding us to a defunct narrative, for the tides of knowledge are ever-shifting and partake of many shores. Therefore, let us, with open hearts and beholden minds, embrace a wider lens, perceiving ingenuity not as an artifact of racial stratification, but as a universal legacy, one that deserves its rightful homage from the dwellers of both sunlit kingdoms and shadowed lands alike. In so doing, we may yet transcend the myopic views of a fractured world, forging a communion rich with understanding and respect for every tincture of humanity, where cognition runs rivers deep, unmarred by the narrow banks of antiquated prejudice.