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Title: Anthropology,%20Eleventh%20Edition


1
Anthropology, Eleventh Edition
  • William Haviland, University of Vermont

2
Part 1 Anthropology
  • The Challenge of Knowing Ourselves

3
Part Outline
  • Chapter 1 The Essence of Anthropology
  • Chapter 2 Biology and Evolution
  • Chapter 3 Living Primates

4
Chapter 1
  • The Essence of Anthropology

5
Chapter Outline
  • What is Anthropology?
  • What do Anthropologists do?
  • How do Anthropologists do what they do?

6
What Is Anthropology?
  • The study of humankind everywhere, throughout
    time.
  • Seeks knowledge about what makes people different
    and about what they all have in common.

7
What Do Anthropologists Do?
  • Study humans as biological organisms.
  • Trace the evolutionary developmentof humans.
  • Investigate biological variation past and present.

8
How Do Anthropologists Work?
  • Formulate hypotheses to develop theories
    supported by data.
  • Anthropologists do fieldwork to become familiar
    with situations and recognize patterns in the
    data.

9
Fields of Anthropology
  • Physical Anthropology
  • Archaeology
  • Linguistic Anthropology
  • Cultural Anthropology

10
Fields of Anthropology
11
Physical Anthropology
  • Also called biological anthropology.
  • Focuses on humans as biological organisms,
    evolution, and human variation.
  • Analyze fossils and observe living primates to
    reconstruct the ancestry of the human species.

12
Cultural Anthropology
  • The study of customary patterns in human
    behavior, thought, and feelings.
  • Focuses on humans as culture-producing and
    culture-reproducing creatures.
  • Two main components ethnography and ethnology.

13
Archaeology
  • Studies material remains in order to describe and
    explain human behavior.
  • Study tools, pottery, and other features such as
    hearths and enclosures that remain as the
    testimony of earlier cultures.

14
Linguistic Anthropology
  • Studies human languages
  • Description of a language - the way a sentence is
    formed or a verb conjugated.
  • History of languages - the way languages change
    over time.
  • The study of language in its social setting.

15
Ethnology
  • Also called sociocultural anthropology.
  • Concentrates human ideas and practices as they
    can be seen and experienced.
  • When possible, the ethnologist becomes
    ethnographer by living among the people under
    study.

16
AnthropologysComparative Method
  • Uses the methods of other scientists by
    developing hypotheses and arriving at theories.
  • Anthropologists make comparisons between peoples
    and cultures past and present, related species,
    and fossil groups.

17
The Scientific Approach and Anthropology
  • Difficulties
  • Objectivity It is difficult for someone who grew
    up in one culture to frame objective hypotheses
    about other cultures.
  • ValidityThe reliability of the ethnographers
    account is not easily validated.

18
Questions Of Ethics
  • Anthropologists have obligations to
  • Those whom they study.
  • Those who fund the research.
  • Those in the profession who expect a study to be
    published so they can further the research in the
    field.
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