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WHAT IS ANTHROPOLOGY? The term originates from two words in Greek:
(1) anthropos meaning “man” as in “human being” (2) logos meaning “study”.
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Consequently we can determine that anthropology can be defined as: “the study of human beings”. Yet many other humanities, sciences and social sciences could also be defined as “the study of human beings” since the definition itself is so broad.
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WHAT THEN IS UNIQUE OR CHARACTERISTIC OF ANTHROPOLOGY?
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(a). anthropology is transcultural; looks all human groups, large and small; distant and near.
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(b). anthropology spans all of human history, the ancient and the modern. We must know past to understand present.
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(c). anthropology is holistic; seeks to demonstrate how aspects of cultures are linked, how they affect one another; seeks to understand all aspects of human behavior. It is a multi-faceted approach to the study of human behavior.
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Anthropology seeks to find the generalities about human life while also explaining the differences. To do this the examples must include a transcultural and historical perspective.
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Anthropology seeks to understand and explain why people do the things they do and say the things they say. A goal is create better understanding among people.
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In sum, we as anthropologists often say that “anthropology is the most humane of the sciences and the most scientific of the humanities”. Thus we draw data from all kinds of sources.
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WHAT ARE the SUB-FIELDS of ANTHROPOLOGY as a SOCIAL SCIENCE?
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THE TWO MAIN SUB-FIELD DIVISIONS WITHIN ANTHROPOLOGY ARE:
(1) biological anthropology (2) cultural anthropology. In this course we will be focusing on cultural anthropology.
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Biological anthropology seeks to understand human behavior from a biological base especially focusing upon human evolutionary history and biological variation among human populations.
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Some examples of biological anthropology are paleontology; primatology; the study of human variation…
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Cultural anthropology seeks to understand universals and variations in human cultures both past and present.
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Archaeology seeks to understand human history through the study (primarily) of materials remains. Sometimes the work of archaeologists overlaps with the work of historians in a specialization, historical archaeology.
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Linguistics seeks to understand human language, written and non-written, spoken and non-verbal. The study of how languages change over time is termed historical linguistics. The study of how language is used in social contexts is termed socio-linguistics.
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Ethnology seeks to understand the patterns of human thought and behavior over time. A holistic, detailed description of a culture is termed an ethnography.
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Underscoring all of the sub-fields in both biological and cultural anthropology is Practicing or Applied anthropology, which seek to apply anthropological knowledge to the solution of human problems. All of the sub-fields in anthropology have an applied, practicing component.
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FURTHER COMMON DIVISIONS WITHIN ANTHROPOLOGY INCLUDE:
(1) area specializations (SE Asia, Europe, Latin American, etc.; areas which share some cultural-historical characteristics ) (2) topic specializations (medical, ecological, gender, etc.; themes upon which to focus within a holistic and deeply contextual framework of a culture)
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