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... 3. Physical anthropologists focus their research in two areas: human evolution and human variation. 4. Primatology, the study of non-human primates, is a specialization within physical anthropology that explores human evolution. 5. Archaeologists spend more time digging up garbage than digging up tr ...
... 3. Physical anthropologists focus their research in two areas: human evolution and human variation. 4. Primatology, the study of non-human primates, is a specialization within physical anthropology that explores human evolution. 5. Archaeologists spend more time digging up garbage than digging up tr ...
Making an Analytical Framework to Apply to Com
... case of time, they expand the boundary of the world-system to include precapitalist societies and not limit it to the modern period. In the case of space, many of them attempt to escape Eurocentric versions of Wallerstein’s world system by paying attention to various aspects of interaction with diff ...
... case of time, they expand the boundary of the world-system to include precapitalist societies and not limit it to the modern period. In the case of space, many of them attempt to escape Eurocentric versions of Wallerstein’s world system by paying attention to various aspects of interaction with diff ...
Network Analysis in the Social Sciences
... this social network, Moreno argued, provided French sociologist Durkheim had argued that basis of mathematical models, they speculated channels for the flow of social influence and ideas human societies were like biological systems in that in a population like the United States, at least among the g ...
... this social network, Moreno argued, provided French sociologist Durkheim had argued that basis of mathematical models, they speculated channels for the flow of social influence and ideas human societies were like biological systems in that in a population like the United States, at least among the g ...
Network Analysis in the Social Sciences REVIEW
... this social network, Moreno argued, provided French sociologist Durkheim had argued that basis of mathematical models, they speculated channels for the flow of social influence and ideas human societies were like biological systems in that in a population like the United States, at least among the g ...
... this social network, Moreno argued, provided French sociologist Durkheim had argued that basis of mathematical models, they speculated channels for the flow of social influence and ideas human societies were like biological systems in that in a population like the United States, at least among the g ...
Career Paths in Anthropology 10/6/09
... trade derivatives if they have the ability to learn new concepts and work well in a team environment. Even if knowledge of structural versus functional anthropology does not prove central to a student’s career, anthropology demands skills of students that can be utilized in other settings. Anderson ...
... trade derivatives if they have the ability to learn new concepts and work well in a team environment. Even if knowledge of structural versus functional anthropology does not prove central to a student’s career, anthropology demands skills of students that can be utilized in other settings. Anderson ...
The historicity of human geography
... geography. Geographers of all persuasions seem able to find solace in ’contextual’ approaches of one kind or another. In the following discussion, the emphasis is upon ’historical’ context and the ways in which it is called upon within geographical theory. Two distinct themes are examined: the place ...
... geography. Geographers of all persuasions seem able to find solace in ’contextual’ approaches of one kind or another. In the following discussion, the emphasis is upon ’historical’ context and the ways in which it is called upon within geographical theory. Two distinct themes are examined: the place ...
RE - SMU
... etc.) (give specific examples from your own areas of interest)? 30. Globalization has become an important concept in a host of disciplines including anthropology. It refers to the processes of movement in population, skills, capital, technology, goods, images and ideologies. It also implies, as Inda ...
... etc.) (give specific examples from your own areas of interest)? 30. Globalization has become an important concept in a host of disciplines including anthropology. It refers to the processes of movement in population, skills, capital, technology, goods, images and ideologies. It also implies, as Inda ...
Austrian Economics—The Ultimate Achievement of an Intellectual
... As we turn to the current state of cultural group selection theory, I will not organize my comments by discussing each of the eight propositions described above. Doing so would give the false impression that contemporary researchers are explicitly seeking to verify Hayek’s theory. Nonetheless, we wi ...
... As we turn to the current state of cultural group selection theory, I will not organize my comments by discussing each of the eight propositions described above. Doing so would give the false impression that contemporary researchers are explicitly seeking to verify Hayek’s theory. Nonetheless, we wi ...
Experiments in Context and Contexting
... only attends to the contexts actors themselves explicitly mobilise, versus an approach that insists upon being sensitive to that which is externalized, marginalized, and suppressed. It also raises the question of the task of scholars in social science and humanities traditions: is the challenge to t ...
... only attends to the contexts actors themselves explicitly mobilise, versus an approach that insists upon being sensitive to that which is externalized, marginalized, and suppressed. It also raises the question of the task of scholars in social science and humanities traditions: is the challenge to t ...
Rerum cognoscere causas: Part II
... 1976) does not strand the social researcher with subjective interpretation - Verstehen - as the only mode of explanation. Indeed, Giddens pronounces unacceptable, "the hermeneutical notion that causal laws have no place in social sciences at all" (Giddens, 1982, p.15). Structuration theory posits a ...
... 1976) does not strand the social researcher with subjective interpretation - Verstehen - as the only mode of explanation. Indeed, Giddens pronounces unacceptable, "the hermeneutical notion that causal laws have no place in social sciences at all" (Giddens, 1982, p.15). Structuration theory posits a ...
Kinship Terms in Arabic language
... but also locally recognized to fall outside the literal scope of kin relations (however these may be locally construct in relation to local concepts of biological relation). Such kin is "pseudo" in that the metaphorical quality of the kin terms used to describe its relations is locally and openly ac ...
... but also locally recognized to fall outside the literal scope of kin relations (however these may be locally construct in relation to local concepts of biological relation). Such kin is "pseudo" in that the metaphorical quality of the kin terms used to describe its relations is locally and openly ac ...
The Anthropologist as a Primatologist
... from my perspective as a primatologist, i.e., as somebody who studies monkeys and apes in nature. Such research is anthropology too, given the multi-field approach, which includes biological (or physical) anthropology; archaeology or prehistory, linguistic anthropology, and social or cultural anthro ...
... from my perspective as a primatologist, i.e., as somebody who studies monkeys and apes in nature. Such research is anthropology too, given the multi-field approach, which includes biological (or physical) anthropology; archaeology or prehistory, linguistic anthropology, and social or cultural anthro ...
Formalism and Relationalism in Social Network Theory
... of sociology: formalism and relationalism.1 Formalism and relationalism have conflicting aims and assumptions that drive analysis into different directions. My goal is to clarify these two distinct strands within social networks in order to help allow a fuller realization of the potential of social ...
... of sociology: formalism and relationalism.1 Formalism and relationalism have conflicting aims and assumptions that drive analysis into different directions. My goal is to clarify these two distinct strands within social networks in order to help allow a fuller realization of the potential of social ...
``Horizontal`` and ``vertical`` skewing: similar objectives, two - Hal-SHS
... “aberration” based their analysis predominantly on very few and questionable ethnographic records: Adolphus P. Elkin’s Kinship in South Australia (1938-40) and Norman Tindale’s later short trips into the area. As Katie Glaskin and myself have shown (2007), these ethnographies however are of very poo ...
... “aberration” based their analysis predominantly on very few and questionable ethnographic records: Adolphus P. Elkin’s Kinship in South Australia (1938-40) and Norman Tindale’s later short trips into the area. As Katie Glaskin and myself have shown (2007), these ethnographies however are of very poo ...
More to morality than mutualism
... mind-set is activated, cognition and decision-making are guided by the individual’s moral values, and thus those with strong altruistic values show a robust pattern of cooperation. We have tested this model using a PGG in which human participants interact with computer-simulated players. Results sup ...
... mind-set is activated, cognition and decision-making are guided by the individual’s moral values, and thus those with strong altruistic values show a robust pattern of cooperation. We have tested this model using a PGG in which human participants interact with computer-simulated players. Results sup ...
post-peer-review-publishers
... In order to understand the present, in this article I have returned to the period of independence. I acknowledge that I have begun with some grand, enduring theories of anthropology that have been critically circulated through the decades (without destroying them), and my article modestly develops s ...
... In order to understand the present, in this article I have returned to the period of independence. I acknowledge that I have begun with some grand, enduring theories of anthropology that have been critically circulated through the decades (without destroying them), and my article modestly develops s ...
Social Constructivism
... new approach. It also grows out of an old methodology that can be traced back at least to the eighteenth-century writings of the Italian philosopher Giambattista Vico (Pompa 1982). According to Vico, the natural world is made by God, but the historical world is made by Man (Pompa 1982: 26). History ...
... new approach. It also grows out of an old methodology that can be traced back at least to the eighteenth-century writings of the Italian philosopher Giambattista Vico (Pompa 1982). According to Vico, the natural world is made by God, but the historical world is made by Man (Pompa 1982: 26). History ...
5 the logic of the social sciences
... factual content of the discussion but only ever with the role which the various participants are playing: with the dramatic interplay as such. As to the so-called arguments, they are of course only one aspect ofverbal behaviour and no more important than any of the other aspects. The idea that one c ...
... factual content of the discussion but only ever with the role which the various participants are playing: with the dramatic interplay as such. As to the so-called arguments, they are of course only one aspect ofverbal behaviour and no more important than any of the other aspects. The idea that one c ...
1 Introduction
... one constituency and strive at all times, and everywhere in society, to advance the justice of our positions. It seems this has to be our pedagogical agenda so long as judges, as educated members of society, continue to allow nineteenth-century colonial views to cloud their twenty-first-century judg ...
... one constituency and strive at all times, and everywhere in society, to advance the justice of our positions. It seems this has to be our pedagogical agenda so long as judges, as educated members of society, continue to allow nineteenth-century colonial views to cloud their twenty-first-century judg ...
Social Science PETER WINCH The British Journal of Sociology
... of at least the general kind of activity, e.g. playing games, religious worship, the use of money, is an established institution, and if his behaviour shows that he understands what is involved in doing that kind of thing. To show that one understands what is involved in game-playing is to show that ...
... of at least the general kind of activity, e.g. playing games, religious worship, the use of money, is an established institution, and if his behaviour shows that he understands what is involved in doing that kind of thing. To show that one understands what is involved in game-playing is to show that ...
Differential infant mortality viewed from an evolutionary biological
... indirectly infant survival, the question remains as to why the human psyche works in such a way. Why are humans as impressionable in their attitudes to children (and other reproductive decisions) as they obviously are? In other words, evolutionary biologists are concerned with exploring the ultimate ...
... indirectly infant survival, the question remains as to why the human psyche works in such a way. Why are humans as impressionable in their attitudes to children (and other reproductive decisions) as they obviously are? In other words, evolutionary biologists are concerned with exploring the ultimate ...
Knowledgeincontext
... easily dismissed and across psychology's many schools and subdisciplinary fields there has been a strong tendency to reduce representation to a purely individual cognitive process deprived of pathos and ethos. Individual mental representations have been theorised as the foundation of knowledge, defi ...
... easily dismissed and across psychology's many schools and subdisciplinary fields there has been a strong tendency to reduce representation to a purely individual cognitive process deprived of pathos and ethos. Individual mental representations have been theorised as the foundation of knowledge, defi ...
Introduction
... disabilities, and more. Many feminists have argued that the social forces that form us, and their effects, cannot be decomposed into discrete elements (Lugones and Spelman 1983; Spelman 1988; Crenshaw 1989; Harris 1990). Is it possible to give a unified account of gender or race, while still affirmi ...
... disabilities, and more. Many feminists have argued that the social forces that form us, and their effects, cannot be decomposed into discrete elements (Lugones and Spelman 1983; Spelman 1988; Crenshaw 1989; Harris 1990). Is it possible to give a unified account of gender or race, while still affirmi ...
The Evolution of Human Behavior: The Darwinian Revolution
... Because Darwin’s theory of evolution had such a great and immediate impact on the scientific world (the entire first edition of the Origin was sold out the first day it was put on sale), one might well expect that it would have had a great impact on those social and behavioral scientists interested ...
... Because Darwin’s theory of evolution had such a great and immediate impact on the scientific world (the entire first edition of the Origin was sold out the first day it was put on sale), one might well expect that it would have had a great impact on those social and behavioral scientists interested ...