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The Social Sciences: Anthropology. The Social Sciences. Anthropology Study human life throughout history Examines biological and cultural diversity Comparative and holistic Sociology Study of the groups and societies humans build and the way social relationships affect behavior
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The Social Sciences • Anthropology • Study human life throughout history • Examines biological and cultural diversity • Comparative and holistic • Sociology • Study of the groups and societies humans build and the way social relationships affect behavior • Focuses on groups and social institutions • Psychology • Study of behavior and mental processes in contexts • Focuses on individuals
General Anthropology • Study of the whole of human existence: • Past, present, future • Biology, society, language, culture
Organized life in groups General Anthropology • Study of the whole of human existence: • Past, present, future • Biology, society, language, culture
Traditions and customs that govern beliefs and behaviors Transmitted through learning General Anthropology • Study of the whole of human existence: • Past, present, future • Biology, society, language, culture
General Anthropology • Study of the whole of human existence: • Past, present, future • Biology, society, language, culture • Grew during the late 19th century • Influenced by: • Evolutionary theory • Reports from travelers to non-Western societies • Discoveries in biology and geology
General Anthropology • Subdisciplines: • Cultural (sociocultural) • Archeological • Biological • Linguistic • Common theme: Humans are biologicaland cultural beings evolving through time
Cultural Anthropology • Study society and culture • Explain cultural similarities and differences • What aspects of culture are universal? Generalized? Particular? • Culture is: • Learned (often unconsciously) • Based on symbols • Shared and integrated • Both stable and changing • Forms subcultures • Is exceedingly complex
Cultural Anthropology • Ethnography • Based largely on fieldwork • Ethnopicture: an in-depth examination of a particular culture or society
Cultural Anthropology • Ethnocentrism: • Judging other cultures by the standards of one’s own culture • Cultural Relativism: • Each culture must be understood in terms of its own values and beliefs • No one culture is better than any other
Cultural Anthropology • Ethnology • Based on cross-cultural comparison • Uses data gathered by ethnographers and archaeologists to identify and explain cultural differences and similarities
Archaeological Anthropology • Reconstructs behavior and cultural patterns by examining material remains • Traditional archaeology focused on discovering grand sites • Some archaeologists‘going local’ tolook at daily life
Archaeological Anthropology • Not always glamorous!
Archaeological Anthropology • Not always glamorous!
Archaeological Anthropology • Must infer cultural patterns from artifacts and ruins • Non-native materials indicate trade • Buildings give clues about the living conditions
Biological Anthropology • Seek to understand human adaptation, variation, and change • Primatology
Biological Anthropology • Seek to understand human adaptation, variation, and change • Primatology • Forensics
Biological Anthropology • Seek to understand human adaptation, variation, and change • Primatology • Forensics • Genetics
Biological Anthropology • Seek to understand human adaptation, variation, and change • Primatology • Forensics • Genetics • Sociobiology
Linguistic Anthropology • Initially documented unwritten, ‘disappearing’ languages • Now those languages have been recorded or lost—very few left
Linguistic Anthropology • Language is constantly changing • Now broadens view to many types of communication
Applied Anthropology • Using anthropological knowledge to solve practical problems • Forensic anthropology • Linguists • Globalization • Garbology