Reclaiming a Scientific AnthropologyAltaMira Press, 2008 - 229 páginas This second edition of Reclaiming a Scientific Anthropology arrives at just the right time, as new advances in science increasingly affect anthropologists of all stripes. Lawrence Kuznar begins by reviewing the basic issues of scientific epistemology in anthropology as they have taken shape over the life of the discipline. He then describes postmodern and other critiques of both science and scientific anthropology, and he concludes with stringent analyses of these debates. This new edition brings this important text firmly into the 21st century; it not only updates the scholarly debates but it describes new research techniques--such as computer modeling systems--that could not have been imagined just a decade ago. In a field that has become increasingly divided over basic methods of reasearch and interpretation, Kuznar makes a powerful argument that anthropology should return to its roots in empirical science. |
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Página 82
... notion of power relations . Foucault's notion of power relations is very complex , and often misunderstood by his disciples as the notion that knowledge is constructed out of unequal or hegemonic relations of power among people ( e.g. ...
... notion of power relations . Foucault's notion of power relations is very complex , and often misunderstood by his disciples as the notion that knowledge is constructed out of unequal or hegemonic relations of power among people ( e.g. ...
Página 99
... notion that science and the whole notion of epistemology itself are simply the historical inventions of 19th - century , En- lightenment - influenced , capitalist European society . According to Rorty ( 1979 : 4 ) , the need to know how ...
... notion that science and the whole notion of epistemology itself are simply the historical inventions of 19th - century , En- lightenment - influenced , capitalist European society . According to Rorty ( 1979 : 4 ) , the need to know how ...
Página 115
... notion that any one past is more real than the others . On the one hand , Shanks and Tilley ( 1987a : 245 ) maintain that , because of the theory - laden nature of observations and the impossibility of value - free science , all ...
... notion that any one past is more real than the others . On the one hand , Shanks and Tilley ( 1987a : 245 ) maintain that , because of the theory - laden nature of observations and the impossibility of value - free science , all ...
Índice
Anthropological Science | 3 |
ScienceProblems with Progress | 31 |
Anthropological ScienceTwo Examples | 45 |
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