Anthropology

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Revision as of 19:46, 24 September 2007 by imported>Stephen Ewen (copyedit intro)
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Anthropology is the study of humankind. It studies all human life in all geographic regions of all time periods, from its evolution as Homo sapiens to its diverse manifestations within cultures and societies both past and present. Since recorded history, people have probed for answers to such questions as Who are we? How have we come to be as we are? How can diverse peoples peaceably co-exist? and What might the past and present tell us about our future? Anthropology seeks to answer these and many other fundamentally human questions.

Anthropology employs both qualitative and quantitative research methods within its numerous sub-disciplines. Common to all anthropologists is the method of fieldwork. A physical anthropologist may dig sites in Central Africa to discover clues about humankind's origins or early migrations patterns, while a socio-cultural anthropologist may live among Haitian peasants to learn the meanings of their unique rituals and political economy. A linguistic anthropologist may study modern Chamorro language usage for clues about the people group's ancient origins, while an applied anthropologist may study inner-city Chicago schoolchildren to advise administrators on how to create conflict-reducing after-school programs. Within each of these and the myriad of other areas in which anthropologists research, they seek answers that benefit humankind. Anthropology has been described as "the reformer's science", and "the most humanistic of the sciences and the most scientific of the humanities".

The development of anthropology

The many facets of anthropology

Sub-disciplines

Archeology and physical anthropology
Socio-cultural anthropology
Linguistics anthropology
Applied anthropology

Successes of anthropology

Controversy

The continuing story

The postmodern challenge

Notes and links