Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volume 9Department of Archaeology, 1990 - Archaeology |
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Page 76
The difficulty of separating technology from human action is perhaps the greatest probler that the cost - benef approach faces . Technology cannot be simply the physical ems of material culture itself , but must be expanded to consider ...
The difficulty of separating technology from human action is perhaps the greatest probler that the cost - benef approach faces . Technology cannot be simply the physical ems of material culture itself , but must be expanded to consider ...
Page 113
mutualist ' approach will succeed both in explaining how and why evolution takes place , and in providing a methodology for evaluating the actions of our remote ancestors . Unlike Piaget , such an approach takes account of the ...
mutualist ' approach will succeed both in explaining how and why evolution takes place , and in providing a methodology for evaluating the actions of our remote ancestors . Unlike Piaget , such an approach takes account of the ...
Page 116
PREHISTORIC LITHIC TECHNOLOGY : SOME ASPECTS OF RESEARCH Jacques Pelegrin Introduction A strong strand in French prehistoric research , the technological approach to lithic industries has been developing for some 20 years , notably ...
PREHISTORIC LITHIC TECHNOLOGY : SOME ASPECTS OF RESEARCH Jacques Pelegrin Introduction A strong strand in French prehistoric research , the technological approach to lithic industries has been developing for some 20 years , notably ...
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Contents
Nathan Schlanger and Anthony Sinclair | 3 |
Nathan Schlanger | 18 |
Robert Cresswell | 39 |
6 other sections not shown
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Common terms and phrases
action activity African analysis appears apprenticeship approach archaeological argued artefacts aspects attempt axes basis becomes behaviour blade Cambridge competence complex concept concerned consider context core distinction early East German Eastern economic effect elements Europe evidence evolution example existence experience expression fact flakes forces function gesture given hand human ideas important individual industries interpretation knapping know-how knowledge Leroi-Gourhan lithic manufacture Marxism material culture matter Mauss meaning nature Notes object observed Oldowan operational organisation Paris particular past period physical possible practical prehistoric present problem production progress question raw material References reflection relations relationship remains Review seems separation simply skills social society specialisation specific stages stone stone tools striking structure suggest symbolic technical techniques theoretical theory tion understanding University Press