Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volume 12Department of Archaeology, 1993 - Archaeology |
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Page 20
... symbolic . While Lacan opposes the symbolic to the real , in the very different sense of the world used by Bhaskar these symbolic relations are very real indeed . Effectively , the world of understanding , significance and relationships ...
... symbolic . While Lacan opposes the symbolic to the real , in the very different sense of the world used by Bhaskar these symbolic relations are very real indeed . Effectively , the world of understanding , significance and relationships ...
Page 22
... symbolic , and we inhabit the symbolic . The real is " that which is lacking in the sym- bolic order , the ineliminable residue of all articulation , the fore- closed element , which may be approached , but never grasped " ( Lacan 1977 ...
... symbolic , and we inhabit the symbolic . The real is " that which is lacking in the sym- bolic order , the ineliminable residue of all articulation , the fore- closed element , which may be approached , but never grasped " ( Lacan 1977 ...
Page 19
... symbolic invention or extemal memory could trigger new innate mental capacities . Rather , the new representational possibilities emerged from a developing symbiosis with the external symbolic environment , the basis for a particularly ...
... symbolic invention or extemal memory could trigger new innate mental capacities . Rather , the new representational possibilities emerged from a developing symbiosis with the external symbolic environment , the basis for a particularly ...
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activity appears approach archaeological record archaeology argued argument aspects attempt Aurignacian authority become behaviour brain burial Cambridge capacity Clark cognitive communication concepts concerned consider context cultural debates discipline discussion early emotional established Europe evidence evolution example existence framework groups heritage hominid human ideas identity important increased individual intellectual interest interpretation involved issues knowledge language London Marxism material meaning memory Mesolithic Middle Palaeolithic mind models nature Neolithic notes objects operation origins particular past perhaps period perspective phrase Pleistocene political position possible post-modern practice Prehistory present problem production reality recent reference relations representation resource result Review sense significant social society space specific structure suggest symbolic temporal theory Thomas tion understanding University Press Upper Palaeolithic volume women