Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volumes 8-9Department of Archaeology, 1989 - Archaeology |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 81
Page 4
... social identity ( Leach 1966 , 403 ; cf. 1954 , 12 ; 1976 , 9 ) . The division , then , is between a mechanics of technical systems and a semiotics of social systems . All practical action is ' fully mechanical ' in the sense that its ...
... social identity ( Leach 1966 , 403 ; cf. 1954 , 12 ; 1976 , 9 ) . The division , then , is between a mechanics of technical systems and a semiotics of social systems . All practical action is ' fully mechanical ' in the sense that its ...
Page 23
... social reason and social practices . The elasticity of human needs , he as- serted , is absolute : there is no other scale of values than that of l'arbitraire social . Even those aspects considered as ' basal ' , or closest to the human ...
... social reason and social practices . The elasticity of human needs , he as- serted , is absolute : there is no other scale of values than that of l'arbitraire social . Even those aspects considered as ' basal ' , or closest to the human ...
Page 45
... social relations , of political drives and technology towards this social change must be weighed and analysed . Here , then , is one of the historical situations which might be said to justify , to be the conceptual basis for the ...
... social relations , of political drives and technology towards this social change must be weighed and analysed . Here , then , is one of the historical situations which might be said to justify , to be the conceptual basis for the ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
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