Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volume 9Department of Archaeology, 1990 - Archaeology |
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Page 18
... natural . Being incipient from the earliest manifestations of life , " the technical act is present amongst the inver tebrate as much as amongst humans , and cannot be limited to artificial production " ( 1965 , 35 ) . This natural ...
... natural . Being incipient from the earliest manifestations of life , " the technical act is present amongst the inver tebrate as much as amongst humans , and cannot be limited to artificial production " ( 1965 , 35 ) . This natural ...
Page 19
... natural to the organism , and organically natural : All seems to happen as if an ideal prototype of a fish or a knapped flint developed itself along preconceivable lines from the fish to the amphibian ... to the mammal .. from the ...
... natural to the organism , and organically natural : All seems to happen as if an ideal prototype of a fish or a knapped flint developed itself along preconceivable lines from the fish to the amphibian ... to the mammal .. from the ...
Page 24
... natural instrument of man . Or , more exactly , without speaking of instrument : the first and most natural techni- cal object , and at the same time , technical means , of man is his body ( 1935 , 372 ) . The apparent similarities of ...
... natural instrument of man . Or , more exactly , without speaking of instrument : the first and most natural techni- cal object , and at the same time , technical means , of man is his body ( 1935 , 372 ) . The apparent similarities of ...
Contents
TECHNOLOGY IN THE HUMANITIES | 3 |
Nathan Schlanger | 18 |
Pierre Lemonnier | 27 |
10 other sections not shown
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Common terms and phrases
Acheulean acquisition action on matter African archaeology analysis anthropology approach Archaeological Review argued artefacts aspects basis behaviour bifaces Cambridge 9:1 Cambridge University Press chaîne opératoire complex concept of technology context core debitage duration of apprenticeship East German Eastern Europe economic elements environment Etiolles evidence evolution evolutionary example flakes flintknapping Franchthi Cave function gesture Gowlett handaxe hominids human hunter-gatherers hunting and gathering individual industries Ingold innovation interpretation Karlin knapper knapping know-how knowledge Leroi-Gourhan lithic lithic analysis Magdalenian manufacture Marxism material culture Mauss meaning Mesolithic nature Neolithic object Oldowan operational organisation Palaeolithic Paris Pelegrin Perlès Pigeot possible practical prehistoric problem raw material relationship Review from Cambridge sequence simply skills social relations society spatial specific stone axes stone tools striking platform structure symbolic technical activities techniques techno-economic theoretical theory tion transformation understanding Upper Palaeolithic Wynn