Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volumes 8-9Department of Archaeology, 1989 - Archaeology |
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Page 109
... argument I will present has two related purposes . First , to illuminate the logic by which theoretical understanding ... argued to represent the ' basic ' research methodology of the sciences in general , and archaeology in particular ...
... argument I will present has two related purposes . First , to illuminate the logic by which theoretical understanding ... argued to represent the ' basic ' research methodology of the sciences in general , and archaeology in particular ...
Page 113
... argue that the ' testing ' of empirical hypotheses derived deductively from more general propositions is a method that ... argued , have in fact no enhanced status . to It is certainly true that the original propositions may derive from ...
... argue that the ' testing ' of empirical hypotheses derived deductively from more general propositions is a method that ... argued , have in fact no enhanced status . to It is certainly true that the original propositions may derive from ...
Page 55
... argued that these advances were made at the expense of any explicit theorisation of the problems that we wanted to tackle . Many of the points raised in that article remain relevant today . Indeed , one can argue that if anything ...
... argued that these advances were made at the expense of any explicit theorisation of the problems that we wanted to tackle . Many of the points raised in that article remain relevant today . Indeed , one can argue that if anything ...
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academic action activity analysis anthropology appears approach Archaeological Review archaeology argued argument artefacts aspects attempt become Cambridge century China Chinese concept concerned considered context critical culture discussion early East effect emotional evidence example excavation existence experience fact given groups human ideas important individual interest interpretation involved iron issues Japan Japanese knowledge language London Marxism material meaning Museum nature object observed organisation original particular past period perspective political possible practice prehistoric present Press problems production question reason recent References reflect regional relations relationship remains represent result Review Review from Cambridge role seems seen sense social society specific stone structure suggest technical techniques theoretical theory things tion tombs traditional types understanding University volume Western writing