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Chapter 2. Archaeology, Anthropology, Science, and the Humanities. Chapter Outline. So What’s An Anthropological Approach? The Culture Concept in Anthropology Scientific and Humanistic Approaches in Archaeology Conclusion: Scientist or Humanist?. An Anthropological Approach.
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Chapter 2 Archaeology, Anthropology, Science, and the Humanities
Chapter Outline • So What’s An Anthropological Approach? • The Culture Concept in Anthropology • Scientific and Humanistic Approaches in Archaeology • Conclusion: Scientist or Humanist?
An Anthropological Approach • Anthropologists believe the best understanding of the human condition arises from a global, comparative, and holistic approach. • Archaeologists are anthropologists who specialize in the deceased. • Archaeologists draw upon each of the sub-fields of anthropology.
Kinds of Anthropologists • Anthropology embraces four primary fields of study: • Biological anthropology • Cultural anthropology • Linguistic anthropology • Archaeology
Culture • Integrated system of beliefs, traditions, and customs that govern or influence a person’s behavior. • Culture is • Learned • Shared by members of a group • Based on the ability to think in terms of symbols
How Anthropologists Study Culture • Ideational perspective • Focus on ideas, symbols, and mental structures as driving forces in shaping human behavior. • Adaptive perspective • Isolates technology, ecology, demography, and economics as the key factors defining human behavior.
Culture as Ideas • This perspective emphasizes ideas, thoughts, and shared knowledge and sees symbols and their meanings as crucial to shaping human behavior. • According to the ideational view of culture, one cannot comprehend human behavior without understanding the symbolic code for that behavior.
Culture as Adaptation • An adaptive perspective is primarily concerned with “culture as a system.” • Social and cultural differences are viewed as responses to the material parameters of life, such as food, shelter, and reproduction. • Human behaviors are seen as linked systemically, such that change in one area (technology) will result in change in another area (social organization).
Characteristics of Science • Science is empirical, or objective. • Science is systematic and explicit. • Science is logical. • Science is explanatory and, consequently, predictive. • Science is self-critical and based on testing. • Science is public.
The Scientific Method • Define a relevant problem. • Establish one or more hypotheses. • Determine the empirical implications of the hypotheses. • Collect appropriate data. • Test the hypothesis by comparing these data with the expected implications. • Reject, revise and/or retest hypotheses as necessary.
Inductive reasoning • Working from specific observations to more general hypotheses. • Deductive reasoning • Reasoning from theory to account for specific observational or experimental results.
Multiple working hypotheses • A set of hypotheses that are tested against the empirical record from the simplest to the most complex. • Bridging arguments • Logical statements linking observations on the static archaeological record to the dynamic behavior or natural processes that produced it.
Testability • The degree to which one’s observations and experiments can be reproduced. • Objectivity • The attempt to observe things as they are, without prejudging or falsifying observations in light of some preconceived view of the world.
Science Is Not Infallible • Although philosophers of science rarely agree on many points, they do generally agree that: • There is no single right way to do science. • A scientific approach cannot guarantee truth.
A Humanistic Approach • Humanists tend to emphasize the dignity and worth of the individual. • Humanistic-style inquiry begins with the premise that all people possess a capacity for self-realization through reason.
Humanism • A doctrine, attitude, or way of life that focuses on human interests and values. • In general, a humanistic approach tends to reject a search for universals and stress instead the importance of the individual’s lived experience.
Scientist or Humanist? • When archaeologists wish to seek and understand patterns and regularities in prehistoric cultures, they are scientists. • When they wish to understand the history and culture of particular past societies, they are humanists.
Scientist or Humanist? • When archaeologists wish to test their ideas about the past, they are scientists. • When they wish to present their results in a way that will be meaningful to the public, they are humanists.
Scientist and Humanist • The scientific method is critical for checking whether the conclusions derived from humanistic approaches are correct. • A humanistic approach is good at generating ideas, but less useful for testing those ideas. • Good archaeologists know they need a humanist in their hearts, and a scientist in their hands.
1. Which of the following is a field of anthropology: • Biology • Languages • Linguistics • Archaeology • None of the above.
Answer: D • Archaeology is a field of anthropology. • Others include: Biological anthropology, Cultural anthropology, and Linguistic anthropology.
2. The ideational perspective of anthropology: • Focuses on ideas, symbols, and mental structures as forces in human behavior. • Considers the ideas of technology, ecology, demography, and economics as factors that define behavior. • Is primarily concerned with “culture as a system”. • All of the above.
Answer: A. • The ideational perspective of anthropology focuses on ideas, symbols, and mental structures as forces in human behavior.
3. Which of the following are characteristics of science? • Objective, logical, explanatory. • Objective, subjective and processural. • Based on an untested idea. • Objective, logical, explanatory, unproven. • All of the above.
Answer: A • Science is objective, logical, and explanatory.