Editor's Introduction

IF 0.2 Q4 ANTHROPOLOGY
M. Harkin
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

It is certainly true that anthropology is, more than any other field of inquiry, a science of the emergent. As Andrew A. White suggests, we can stack the sciences up with physics, the most fundamental, at the bottom, then chemistry, biology, and so forth until we reach anthropology. Just as chemistry relies on and encompasses physics, so, by the time we get to anthropology, it encompasses all scientific knowledge, as it is all, in some fashion, relevant to human culture. An archaeologist cannot study a pyramid, for example, without taking into account physics, geology, economics, and so forth. Anthropologists deal not only with emergent phenomena, but with emergent systems such as economics, kinship, information flow, or cultural ecology. These are remarkably complex systems that often defy traditional ethnographic description. In many such cases, White argues, complexity and chaos theory may provide ways of understanding and modeling these systems. At one point he mentions schools of fish. This brought to my mind a memory from a visit to Hanoi a few years ago. Traffic on the boulevards was constant, consisting entirely of motorbikes. Few crosswalks or signals existed. I had no idea how to cross the street until a young man came up to me and demonstrated that as long as I walked predictably, the bikes would part to make room, much like a school of fish avoiding a moving obstacle. White’s complaint with this sort of example, which seems valid, is that up to this point anthropologists have only flirted with these theories, using them as a metaphor for the social processes in which they are interested. I confess myself to having been such a flirter, attempting to understand Kwakwakawakw and Heiltsuk ecological relation to salmon as expressed in myth, using concepts from complexity theory (Harkin 2007). I agree that moving forward the use of formal modeling of these complex or chaotic systems offers great promise; and one side benefit is the ability to revitalize the four-field approach. I have some differences with the author on this approach, as I believe that the configuration of our field is historically contingent and that no one, including Franz Boas, was truly a four-field practitioner. Nonetheless, I think there are many opportunities for valuable exchange at the margins of the subfields, both with other subfields of anthropology, and other fields of science.
编辑器的介绍
毫无疑问,人类学比其他任何研究领域都更像是一门新兴的科学。正如安德鲁·a·怀特(Andrew A. White)所建议的那样,我们可以把所有的科学摞起来,最基础的是物理学,排在最后,然后是化学、生物学,等等,直到人类学。就像化学依赖并包含了物理学一样,当我们进入人类学时,它包含了所有的科学知识,因为它在某种程度上都与人类文化有关。例如,考古学家研究金字塔,就不能不考虑物理学、地质学、经济学等等。人类学家不仅研究新兴现象,而且研究新兴系统,如经济学、亲属关系、信息流或文化生态学。这些都是非常复杂的系统,常常与传统的民族志描述相悖。怀特认为,在许多这样的情况下,复杂性和混沌理论可能提供理解和建模这些系统的方法。他一度提到鱼群。这使我想起几年前访问河内的情景。林荫大道上车水马龙,全是摩托车。几乎没有人行横道或信号灯。我不知道该怎么过马路,直到一个年轻人向我走来,向我演示,只要我按期行走,自行车就会分开让出空间,就像一群鱼避开移动的障碍物一样。怀特对这类例子的抱怨(似乎是有道理的)是,到目前为止,人类学家只是在玩弄这些理论,把它们作为他们感兴趣的社会过程的隐喻。我承认自己曾经是这样一个调情者,试图理解Kwakwakawakw和Heiltsuk生态与鲑鱼的关系,就像神话中表达的那样,使用复杂性理论的概念(Harkin 2007)。我同意向前推进这些复杂或混沌系统的形式化建模提供了巨大的希望;一个附带的好处是能够使四领域方法重新焕发活力。在这个方法上,我与作者有一些不同,因为我相信我们领域的结构在历史上是偶然的,没有人,包括弗朗茨·博阿斯,是真正的四个领域的实践者。尽管如此,我认为在子领域的边缘有很多有价值的交流机会,无论是与人类学的其他子领域,还是与其他科学领域。
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来源期刊
Reviews in Anthropology
Reviews in Anthropology ANTHROPOLOGY-
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
5
期刊介绍: Reviews in Anthropology is the only anthropological journal devoted to lengthy, in-depth review commentary on recently published books. Titles are largely drawn from the professional literature of anthropology, covering the entire range of work inclusive of all sub-disciplines, including biological, cultural, archaeological, and linguistic anthropology; a smaller number of books is selected from related disciplines. Articles evaluate the place of new books in their theoretical and topical literatures, assess their contributions to anthropology as a whole, and appraise the current state of knowledge in the field. The highly diverse subject matter sustains both specialized research and the generalist tradition of holistic anthropology.
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