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Introduction to Anthropology What Is Anthropology? Generally recognized as the study of man/humans incredibly wide-ranging Only about 150 years old as a field Relatively few are acquainted with it, except for four major figures: Mead, Leakeys, Benedict, others Linked to the idea of culture Pop definitions of culture are pervasive, but anthropology definition is more inclusive Tasks of Anthropology Description Most anthropologists (ethnography) Comparison (ethnology) Explanation: accept that there are some basic human natural behaviors—a hard wiring—but that these are overlain by cultural behaviors Task of anthropology are the same as any science, but also deals with human values Leads to questions of what is or is not natural among humans? Four Subfields of Anthropology Anthropological Linguistics Archaeology Cultural Anthropology Physical or biological anthropology Anthropological Linguistics Language as a foundation for culture What you can tell about a culture by use of language Variations of symbolic communication Body language Archaeology Studies the evolution/change/development of human culture through time Problems of time Problems of preservation Problems of ethnographic analogy Cultural Anthropology Examines living cultures and all their variety Physical or Biological Anthropology Looks at the biological underpinnings of culture Holistic perspective is key Why Study Anthropology? Humans are just plain interesting Dangers: using the practices of another culture to justify your own cultural practices (Ethnocentrism & Cultural relativism) Humanistic reasons If we know what others do and why, we will be less likely to rush to judgment about them Scientific reasons If you can predict how culture works, then you can change it to make the world better