Chapter 1 Introduction
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Transcript Chapter 1 Introduction
Introduction to Physical
Anthropology
Ninth Edition
Robert Jurmain
Harry Nelson
Lynn Kilgore
Wenda Trevathan
Chapter 1, Introduction
What is Anthropology?
Cultural Anthropology
Archaeology
Linguistic Anthropology
Physical Anthropology
Physical Anthropology and Scientific Method
The Anthropological Perspective
What is Anthropology?
The study of humankind.
The study of all aspects of the human species
including our biology (from an evolutionary
perspective).
Subfields of Anthropology
Cultural Anthropology
Archaeology
Physical Anthropology
Cultural Anthropology
Study of all aspects of human behavior.
Subfields:
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Urban - deals with issues of inner cities.
Medical - explores relationship between culture and
health.
Economic - concerned with the distribution of goods
and resources.
Archaeology
Study of early cultures and lifeways to answer
questions of human behavior.
Artifacts and material culture left behind by
civilizations provide information about the
nature of the society.
Linguistic Anthropology
Study of the origin of language and human
speech.
Acquisition and use of language is a unique
human characteristic.
Relationship between culture and language:
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How do members of a society perceive
phenomena?
How does the use of language shape perceptions?
Physical Anthropology
Study of human biology within framework of
evolution.
Two principal areas of interest:
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How modern species came to exist
Physical variation
Subfields of Physical Anthropology
Paleoanthropology - study of human evolution.
Anthropometry - measurement of human body parts.
Primatology - study of nonhuman primates.
Osteology - study of skeletons.
Scientific Method
State the research problem.
Develop a hypothesis.
Test the hypothesis through data
collection and analysis of the data.
If the hypothesis is verified it becomes a
theory.