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  • ...ropology [[research]] from journal sources. Covers Cultural and Physical [[Anthropology]], [[Archaeology]] and [[Linguistics]]. It is updated yearly and coverage i [[Category: Anthropology]]
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  • ...tion, primate [[behavior]], [[genetics]], [[ancient civilization]]s, cross-cultural studies, social theories, and the [[value]] of human [[language]] for [[sym [[Category: Anthropology]]
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  • '''''Cultural Encyclopedia of the Body''''' Explores the human body alphabetically by par [[Category: Anthropology]]
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  • ...elopment, social psychology, social structure, social work, socio-cultural anthropology, sociological history, sociological research, sociological theory, substanc
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  • ==Anthropology== ...ethnicity or a nation. Coping with the [[differences]] between two sets of cultural [[conventions]] is a question of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intercultur
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  • ...r [[conquest]], had become subject to a state or "nation" with a different cultural mainstream.— with the first usage of the term ethnic group in 1935, and e ...[[racial]], [[nation]]al, [[tribal]], [[religious]], [[linguistic]], or [[cultural]] [[origin]] or background <ethnic minorities> <ethnic enclaves>
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  • ...y]], [[sociology]], [[political science]], [[economics]], human geography, cultural studies, and Marxism in one volume, the Dictionary presents concise, clearl
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  • ...oriented cultural [[contexts]] display less veneration of elders. In other cultural contexts, some people seek [[providence]] from their deceased ancestors; th [[Category: Anthropology]]
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  • ...cal]] [[data]] suggests many [[societies]] prefer polygamous marriage as a cultural ideal. There are multiple forms of nonmonogamy that are used to organize fa [[Category: Anthropology]]
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  • ...Korowai are one of very few tribes still believed to eat human flesh as a cultural practice. It is also still known to be practiced as a ritual and in war in ...d to test the bounds of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultural_relativism cultural relativism] as it challenges anthropologists "to define what is or is not b
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  • ...eople" for certain [[purposes]] has criteria which would seek to include [[cultural]] [[groups]] (and their continuity or [[association]] with a given region, * alongside other cultural groups during the formation of a nation-state; or
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  • ...and a humanity, and in the United States it is thought of as a branch of [[anthropology]], although in Europe it is viewed as a separate [[discipline]]. ...gy has various [[goals]], which range from studying human [[evolution]] to cultural evolution and understanding culture [[history]].
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  • ...ts of modern [[society]] are also cultural artifacts. For example, in an [[Anthropology|anthropological]] [[context]], a television is an artifact of modern cultur
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  • ...ips against the lips or other [[body]] parts of another or of an object. [[Cultural]] connotations of kissing vary widely. Depending on the culture and [[conte [[Category: Anthropology]]
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  • ...ng has a very long and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross-cultural cross-cultural] [[history]], with many [[cultures]] giving the embalming [[processes]] a g [[Category: Anthropology]]
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  • ...[death]] are [[observed]]. These ceremonies or rites differ according to [[cultural]] [[practice]] and [[religious]] [[belief]]. [[Category: Anthropology]]
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  • ...y]] to one's own tribe or [[social]] [[group]]: a society [[motivated]] by cultural tribalism. ''Tribalism'' implies the [[possession]] of a strong cultural or [[ethnic]] [[identity]] that [[separates]] one member of a group from th
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  • ...law]] and in [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultural_anthropology cultural anthropology], '''affinity''', as distinguished from [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cons
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  • ====[[Anthropology]][https://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Category:Anthropology]==== Study of [[earth]] in terms of physical, spatial, and [[cultural]] relationships.
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  • ==Anthropology== ...st basic elements ritual is one of many [[cultural universals]], yet cross-cultural variation in form, content and social function is often great. Of particul
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  • ...and churches. By extension, "cult" has come to connote the total [[culture|cultural]] aspects of 'a' religion, as they are distinguished from others through di ...comparative study of cult practice is part of the [[discipline]]s of the [[anthropology]] of [[religion]] and the [[sociology]] of religion, two aspects of compara
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  • ...php?title=Paper_76#76:4._THE_VIOLET_RACE Adamites] and has been of great [[cultural]] [[value]] to all advanced races. [[Category: Anthropology/TeaM]]
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  • ...ance of social distance and the [[communication]] of [[social status]] and cultural identity. The [[Quran]] has no requirement that women cover their faces wit [[Category: Anthropology]]
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  • ...ki/Captain_James_Cook Captain James Cook], visited Tonga. Describing the [[cultural]] [[practices]] of the Tongans, he wrote: [[Category: Anthropology]]
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  • In this way the Helianx became the first of the early cosmic cultural [[anthropology|anthropologists]], accumulating vast libraries of holographic recordings of
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  • ...than to define, and no unitary definition is offered here. Instead, what [[Anthropology|anthropologists]] and [[Linguistics|linguists]] mean by language is better ...fined and whose membership may expand or contract, depending on social and cultural consensus. They are all "dialects" because, at different levels, they all r
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  • ...orm of [[shelter]]. [[Expressions]] such as "living in a cave" have become cultural [[metaphors]] for a modern human who displays traits of great [[ignorance]] [[Category: Anthropology]]
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  • The [[Butler TeaM]] used them extensively as [[social]] lubricants and cultural [[stimuli]]; we used them to help direct the [[agenda]]. It was not uncommo [[Category: Anthropology]]
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  • ...cial roles, [[language]] and [[symbols]] is the ‘means by which social and cultural continuity are attained’ (Clausen 1968: 5). ...immel [[concept]] was incorporated into various branches of psychology and anthropology (1968: 31-52).
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  • ...man]] [[philosophy]]; most of the world's [[religions]] still carry this [[cultural]] birthmark of the long-gone days of the [[emerging]] [[ghost]] [[cults]]. [[Category: Anthropology/TeaM]]
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  • :This is no longer widely practised, with the exception of a small number of cultural communities (e.g. limited groups of conservatives in Israel, India), and mo [[Category: Anthropology]]
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  • In the [[social sciences]], ''atavism'' is a cultural tendency—for example, people in the [[modern]] era reverting to the ways [[Category: Anthropology]]
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  • ...ropean [[cult]] [[caves]], dating back to the earliest [[stages]] of human cultural [[development]] in the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stone_age stone age]. [[Category: Anthropology]]
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  • ...e [[traditional]] Pacific notions of mana as a [[quality]]. The Polynesian Cultural Centre in Hawaii billed one of its flamboyant stage shows as ‘Mana’; an [[Category: Anthropology]]
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  • ...d explains religion, emphasizing systematic, historically-based, and cross-cultural perspectives. ...tudies draws upon multiple disciplines and their methodologies including [[anthropology]], [[sociology]], [[psychology]], [[philosophy]], and [[history]] of religi
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  • ...n organized group of people associated together for religious, benevolent, cultural, scientific, political, patriotic, or other purposes. .../www.mc.maricopa.edu/dept/d10/asb/anthro2003/glues/model_complex.html] The Cultural Evolution of Civilizations].
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  • ...ut most of the objections to such [[experiments]] rest on [[social]] and [[cultural]] [[prejudices]] rather than on [[biological]] [[considerations]]. Even amo [[Category: Anthropology/TeaM]]
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  • 63:6.1 As the Andonic [[dispersion]] extended, the [[cultural]] and [[spiritual]] [[status]] of the [[clans]] [[retrogressed]] for nearly [[Category: Anthropology/TeaM]]
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  • ...ch, combined with the human [[desire]] for self-[[expression]], has led to cultural innovations such as [[art]], [[literature]] and [[music]]. [[Category: Anthropology]]
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  • ...imary methods, and the text that is written as a result of the practice of anthropology and its elements. ...Cultural relativism|cultural relativity]] and the use of findings to frame cultural critiques. This has been particularly prominent in the United States, from
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  • ...tuality]]. This approach incorporates contributions from [[psychology]], [[anthropology]], [[philosophy]] and [[theology]] as well as classical and contemporary [[
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  • ...gle emblematic gesture can a have very different significance in different cultural [[contexts]], ranging from complimentary to highly offensive. * Kendon, Adam (1997). Annual Review of Anthropology. 26: 109-128.
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  • ...grasps for some perpetuating [[symbolism]]—seeks some [[technique]] for [[cultural]] [[manifestation]] which will insure [[survival]] and augment [[realizatio [[Category: Anthropology/TeaM]]
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  • ...uperiors, and especially the [[Emperor]], as well as for [[religious]] and cultural objects of [[worship]]. In [[modern]] times, usage of the kowtow has become [[Category: Anthropology]]
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  • ...cked a unifying, ecclesiastic language like [[Sanskrit]], and achieved its cultural unity by having a written language that was flexible in pronunciation but m [[Category: Anthropology]]
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  • ...that a person might play, known as either the ''social identity'' or the ''cultural identity''. Erikson's work, in the psychodynamic tradition, aimed to invest ==Identity in social anthropology==
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  • ...ure have been [[assimilated]] by [[mainstream]] society. The religious and cultural [[diversity]] espoused by the hippies has gained widespread acceptance, and [[Category: Anthropology]]
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  • In [[sociology]] or [[anthropology]], '''social status''' is the honor or prestige attached to one's position ...the dominance of cultural capital early on by stating that “differences in cultural capital mark the differences between the classes” (Bourdieu 69).
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  • ...ps of people, although anyone may be discriminated against on an ethnic or cultural basis, independently of their somatic differences. According to the United ...human rights and fundamental freedoms in the political, economic, social, cultural or any other field of public life. '[3]</blockquote>
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  • ...ocial interactions, statuses and institutions, and [[cultural anthropology|cultural anthropologists]] focus on norms and values. This division of labor reflec ...civilized than others, and some people as more cultured than others. Some cultural theorists have thus tried to eliminate popular or mass culture from the def
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  • ...ocial interactions, statuses and institutions, and [[cultural anthropology|cultural anthropologists]] focus on norms and values. This division of labor reflec ...civilized than others, and some people as more cultured than others. Some cultural theorists have thus tried to eliminate popular or mass culture from the def
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  • ...y considering the effects of such outside disciplines as [[economics]], [[anthropology]], and [[geography]] on global history. Traditionally, historians have atte ...verstein, Unwrapping the Sacred Bundle: Reflections on the Disciplining of Anthropology, Duke University Press [https://www.dukeupress.edu/cgibin/forwardsql/search
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  • ...ibes; some of this debate [[reflects]] more general [[controversy]] over [[cultural]] [[evolution]] and colonialism. In the popular [[imagination]], tribes ref [[Category: Anthropology]]
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  • ...hropological]] dimensions, for example [[Umberto Eco]] proposes that every cultural [[phenomenon]] can be studied as [[communication]]. However, some semiotici ...o some of the humanities (including [[literary theory]]) and to cultural [[anthropology]].
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  • ..., [[psychiatry]], [[anthropology]], [[sociology]], [[pharmacology]], cross-cultural studies (Scotton, Chinen and Battista, 1996; Davis, 2003) and social work ( ...utic]] disciplines ([[humanism]], [[existentialism]], [[phenomenology]], [[anthropology]]), although it has always included contributions involving experimental an
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  • *Cultural Anthropology in “real time” ...you who are in your 40’s and 50’s, you will see the complete spectrum of a cultural change in front of your eyes through the duration of your life.
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  • ...t]], [[Mediterranean Basin|Mediterranean]] and [[South Asia]]. Al-Biruni's anthropology of religion was only possible for a scholar deeply immersed in the lore of ...m]]ic anthropology. Richard Tapper (1995). "Islamic Anthropology" and the "Anthropology of Islam", ''Anthropological Quarterly'' '''68''' (3), Anthropological Anal
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  • ===Anthropology=== ...al to anthropological research. Some of the ways community is addressed in anthropology include the following:
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  • ...personal narrative process is involved in a person's sense of personal or cultural [[identity]], and in the creation and construction of [[memory|memories]], ...e]], sometimes also known as master- or grand narrative, is a higher-level cultural narrative [[schema]] which orders and explains knowledge and experience.
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  • ..., and the reasons for relating literary theory to ethics and philosophical anthropology. Construing Schelling as an idealist or Romantic has enabled philosophers t ...to literary studies, anthropology, linguistics, psychology and social and cultural theory, this creates a tendency to see him as belonging to one of these are
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  • The capitalist world-system is, however, far from homogeneous in cultural, political, and economic terms — instead characterized by fundamental [[d ...knowledge]]' defined by the disciplinary division between [[sociology]], [[anthropology]], [[political science]], [[economics]], and [[the humanities]], and the pu
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  • ...concept]] of consanguinity originally referred to relations by "blood," [[Anthropology|anthropologists]] have argued that one must understand the idea of "blood" It has been argued by many [[sociology|sociologists]], [[anthropology|anthropologists]] [[philosophers]], and [[psychoanalysts]] that the main f
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  • ...from 1989-present by Dr. Richard Boylan, research behavioral scientist and cultural anthropologist with graduate training in spirituality and philosophy. This ..."superiority"? The issue of the visiting Star Visitor races' intellectual, cultural, genetic, technological and spiritual superiority, while not specifically a
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  • ...environments. It encompasses [[human]], [[politics|political]], [[culture|cultural]], [[social]], and [[economics|economic]] aspects. While the major focus of *[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultural_geography Cultural geography]
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  • ...sychology]], artificial intelligence, neuroscience, [[linguistics]], and [[anthropology]]. Its [[intellectual]] origins are in the mid-1950s when researchers in se ...the operations of mind in particular physical and social environments. For cultural anthropologists, the main method is [[ethnography]], which requires living
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  • Just as you recall from your cultural field of [[entertainment]], “Accentuate the [[positive]], eliminate the [ ...l [[study]], [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultural_anthropology cultural anthropology], and that is my field. So I like to see how all these things affect others
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  • ...own limitations by blending the objective with the subjective. Generative anthropology embraces such subjectivity and tends not to avail itself of such empirical The originary thinking demanded by generative anthropology is to some degree anathema to the harder sciences that ignore the human exp
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  • ...everybody’s DNA; he disagrees with that statement. He says that they are cultural assumptions. I didn’t argue with him, like I was told not to do, but I w ...of thinking, that as it being innate to your DNA, that it was there before cultural civilization actually became created, that it was there before culture.
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  • ...een debated among scholars, but modern [[archaeology]] has suggested early cultural links with the [[Mycenaean Greece|Mycenean]] world in mainland [[Greece]]. ...08. Philadelphia: The University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology
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  • ...ssay, particularly in [[sociology]], [[political science]] and political [[anthropology]]. ...at a given time. Dominant paradigms are shaped both by the [[community]]’s cultural background and by the context of the historical [[moment]]. The following a
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  • ...n, intimate in style, personal and domestic in scope and setting, a female cultural event which springs from and perpetuates the restrictions of the female rol # See for example the popular-cultural account and discussion of the phenomenon as an Internet urban legend at htt
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  • ...spring.[1] Because of the complexity and differences of a mothers' social, cultural, and religious definitions and roles, it is challenging to define a mother [[Category: Anthropology]]
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  • ...al beginnings ("creation myths", natural phenomena, otherwise inexplicable cultural conventions or [[ritual]]s, and anything else for which no simple explanati ...th mythological qualities into pragmatic contexts, for example following a cultural or religious paradigm shift (notably the re-interpretation of pagan mytholo
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  • ...pensity for me to project onto you my interest in sociology and cultural [[anthropology]]. Is it not, after all, a natural consideration that in [[Correcting Time]
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  • ...s of what constitutes dance are dependent on [[Society|social]], [[Culture|cultural]], [[aesthetic]], [[artistic]] and [[moral]] constraints and range from fun ...horeology]], encompassing the dance-related aspects of [[Anthropology]], [[Cultural Studies]], [[Gender Studies]], [[Area studies]], [[Postcolonial theory]], [
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  • ...umanities are [[anthropology]], [[area studies]], [[communications]] and [[cultural studies]], although these are often regarded as social sciences. ...s of what constitutes dance are dependent on [[Society|social]], [[Culture|cultural]], [[aesthetic]] [[artistic]] and [[moral]] constraints and range from func
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  • ...es of social conformity significantly shape moral decisions, but deny that cultural norms and customs define moral behavior. ...[Moral Zeitgeist]] helps describe how morality evolves from biological and cultural origins and evolves with [[time]] within a [[culture]].
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  • ...old certain beliefs and assumptions collectively. Do you believe that our cultural differences and our nationalistic differences and the differences in our ma ...es “The People,” but as you said that, it suddenly flipped me around to my anthropology, and you are correct. It’s obviously where all this is coming from. The
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  • ...a product of inherited (i.e. genetic) traits or environmental, social and cultural factors. ...GE&origin=JSTOR-enlargePage 'The European': Allegories of Racial Purity]'' Anthropology Today, Vol. 7, No. 5 (Oct., 1991), pp. 7-9 doi:10.2307/3032780 Bindon, Jim.
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  • ...ex emotions. In one model, the complex emotions could arise from [[culture|cultural]] conditioning or association combined with the basic emotions. Alternative ...alyses and cross-cultural comparisons of a range of human activities; some anthropology studies examine the role of emotions in human activities. In the field of [
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  • ...l of social complexity and organization, and by their diverse economic and cultural activities. ...o refer to society as a whole. To nineteenth-century [[England|English]] [[anthropology|anthropologist]] [[Edward Burnett Tylor]], for example, civilization was "t
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  • ...umanities are [[anthropology]], [[area studies]], [[communications]] and [[cultural studies]], although these are often regarded as social sciences. Scholars w ...s of what constitutes dance are dependent on [[Society|social]], [[Culture|cultural]], [[aesthetic]] [[artistic]] and [[moral]] constraints and range from func
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  • ...ocial learning and [[language acquisition]] in juvenile humans. [[Physical anthropology|Physical anthropologists]] argue that a reorganization of the structure of The most widely accepted view among current [[anthropology|anthropologists]] is that ''Homo sapiens'' originated in the African [[sava
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  • ...l sciences|social scientists]] have re-conceptualized the term "race" as a cultural category or [[social construct]], in other words, as a particular way that ...current inequalities between Blacks and Whites are primarily the result of cultural and historical factors, the result of past racism, of [[slavery]] and of [[
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  • ...f prayer is attested in written sources as early as 5000 years ago. Some [[anthropology|anthropologists]], such as Sir [[Edward Burnett Tylor]] and Sir [[James Geo ...logy of Prayer'' which lists six types of prayer: primitive, ritual, Greek cultural, philosophical, mystical and prophetic. (Christian theology ISBN 0-8010-218
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  • ...s that a place, its [[structure]], and its [[symbols]] express fundamental cultural [[values]] and [[principles]]. By giving these visible form, the sacred pla ...in Traditional Concepts of Ritual Space in India: Studies in Architectural Anthropology, edited by Jan Pieper, "Art and Archaeology Research Papers," no. 17 (Londo
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  • Drawing on hundreds of studies from [[anthropology]], [[linguistics]] and the study of [[oral tradition]], Ong summarizes ten ...31-2 Aleksandr Romanovich Luria. ''Cognitive Development: its Social and Cultural Foundations'', Michael Cole (ed.); Martin Lopez-Morillas and Lynn Solotarof
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  • [[Anthropology]] characterizes societies, in part, based on a [[society]]'s concept of wea ...conomy and then [[economics]]. This transition took place as a result of a cultural bias inherent in the Enlightenment. Wealth was seen as an objective [[fact]
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  • ...ut future classes and in a basic degree program within sociology or social anthropology or social psychology. You do not need to spend much time with these adjunc ...uing. The difficulty of your world is that you are in an immense, IMMENSE cultural transition. You have nations of people and tribes of people who are still
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  • ...social identity formation, group integration and cohesion and to reaffirm cultural values and beliefs (Winkelman 1995). ...ompanied by the inner or outward declaration of wilful intent and possibly cultural context through ritual);
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  • ...power in politics which entails theoretical views similar to notions of [[cultural hegemony]]. These 3 dimensions of power are today often considered definin ...hey are capable of transcendence, but they are compelled into immanence by cultural and social conditions that deny them that transcendence (see Beauvoir, chap
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  • The cultural traditions of [[marriage]] and [[betrothal]] are the most basic customs in ...'' London: Allen Lane, 1968; New York: Penguin Books, 1994. ''Structural Anthropology.'' (volume 2) London: Allen Lane, 1977; New York: Peregrine Books 1976.
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  • ...ly instances of much of the magical lore that later became part of Western cultural expectations about the practice of magic, especially [[ritual|ceremonial]] ...Golden Dawn represented perhaps the peak of this wave of magic, attracting cultural celebrities like [[William Butler Yeats]], [[Algernon Blackwood]], and [[Ar
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  • ...in their cultural context, utilizing [[archaeology|archaeological]] and [[anthropology|anthropological]] evidence.
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