Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volume 9Department of Archaeology, 1990 - Archaeology |
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Page 234
... sense ' approach to life . And yet he knows that the sense of self - satisfied superiority he derives from such cynicism is exactly founded on his very impotence to act and be heard in this wider realm ruled by orthodox reason , the ...
... sense ' approach to life . And yet he knows that the sense of self - satisfied superiority he derives from such cynicism is exactly founded on his very impotence to act and be heard in this wider realm ruled by orthodox reason , the ...
Page 240
... sense , it has been one of the arguments of the post - processual archaeolo- gies that traditionally subjective areas of experience ( such as emotion ) are in the first place intrinsically and unavoidably a part of the process of ...
... sense , it has been one of the arguments of the post - processual archaeolo- gies that traditionally subjective areas of experience ( such as emotion ) are in the first place intrinsically and unavoidably a part of the process of ...
Page 249
... sense , to be embodied in the world in a particular way . We perceive an object to be an artefact by reference to ... sense that they occur in time , and are continually shifting and changing to take account of emerging evidence , but ...
... sense , to be embodied in the world in a particular way . We perceive an object to be an artefact by reference to ... sense that they occur in time , and are continually shifting and changing to take account of emerging evidence , but ...
Contents
TECHNOLOGY IN THE HUMANITIES | 3 |
Nathan Schlanger | 18 |
Robert Cresswell | 39 |
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action activity African analysis anthropology appears approach archaeological Archaeological Review argued artefacts aspects attempt become behaviour Cambridge complex concept concerned considered context countries culture discussion display domestication Eastern economic effect emotional Europe evidence evolution example existence experience expressed fact function given groups hand human ideas important individual interest interpretation issue Journal knowledge language look Marxism material material culture meaning museum nature Notes object Oldowan operational organisation origins particular past period possible practical present problems production question raw material reason recent References reflect relations relationship remains response result Review Review from Cambridge role seems sense skills social society specialisation specific stone structure suggest symbolic technical techniques theoretical theory tion traditional understanding University Press volume