1. Anthropology is the holistic and comparative study of humanity. It is the systematic exploration of human biological and cultural diversity. Examining the origins of, and changes in human biology and culture, anthropology provides explanations for similarities and differences. The four subfields of general anthropology are (socio)cultural, archaeological, biological, and linguistic. All consider variation in time and space. Each also examines adaptation - the process by which organisms cope with environmental stresses.
2. Cultural forces mold human biology, including our body times and images. Societies have particular standards of physical attractiveness. They also have specific ideas about what activities - for example, various sports - are appropriate for males and females.
3. Cultural anthropology explores the cultural diversity of the present and the recent past. Archaeology reconstructs cultural patterns, often of prehistoric populations. Biological anthropology documents diversity involving fossils, genetics, growth and development, bodily responses, and nonhuman primates. Linguistic anthropology considers diversity among languages. It also studies how speech changes in social situations and over time.
4. Concerns with biology, society, culture and language link anthropology to many other fields - sciences and humanities. Anthropologists study art, music and literature across various cultures. But their concern is more with the creative expressions of common people than with arts designed for elites. Anthropologists examine creators and products in their social context. Sociologists traditionally study urban and industrial populations, whereas anthropologists have focused on rural, nonindustrial peoples. Psychological anthropology views human psychology in the context of social and cultural variation.
5. Anthropology has two dimensions: academic and applied. Applied anthropology is the use of anthropological data, perspectives, theory, and methods to identify, assess, and solve contemporary social problems.
6. Ethnologists attempt to identify and explain cultural differences and similarities and to build theories about how social and cultural systems work. Scientists strive to improve understanding by testing hypotheses - suggested explanations. Explanations rely on associations and theories. An association in an observed relationship between variables. A theory is more general, suggesting or implying associations and attempting to explain them. The scientific method characterized any anthropological endeavour that formulates research questions and gathers or uses systematic data to test hypotheses. Often anthropologists gather data that enable them to pose and test a number of separate hypotheses.
299677840 | Anthropology | The study of the human species and its immediate ancestors. | |
299677841 | Holistic | Encompassing past, present, and future; biology, society, language and culture. | |
299677842 | Culture | Traditions and customs transmitted through learning. | |
299677843 | General anthropology | Anthropology as a whole: cultural, archaeological, biological, and linguistic anthropology. | |
299677844 | Food production | An economy based on plant cultivation and/or animal domestication. | |
299677845 | Biocultural | Combining biological and cultural approaches to a given problem. | |
299677846 | Ethnology | The study of sociocultural differences and similarities | |
299677847 | Cultural anthropology | The comparative, cross-cultural, study of human society and culture. | |
299677848 | Ethnography | Fieldwork in a particular cultural setting. | |
299677849 | Archaeological anthropology | The study of human behaviour through material remains. | |
299677850 | Biological anthropology | The study of human biological variation in time and space. | |
299677851 | Physical anthropology | Same as biological anthropology | |
299677852 | Linguistic anthropology | The study of language and linguistic diversity in time, space, and society. | |
299677853 | Sociolinguistics | The study of language in society. | |
299677854 | Science | Field of study that seeks reliable explanations, with reference to the material and physical world. | |
299677855 | Applied anthropology | Using anthropology to solve contemporary problems. | |
299677856 | Cultural resource management | Deciding what needs saving when entire archaeological sites cannot be saved. | |
299677857 | Theory | A set of ideas formulated to explain something. | |
299677858 | Association | An observed relationship between two or more variables. | |
299677859 | Hypothesis | A suggested but as yet unverified explanation. | |
302624323 | What characterizes anthropology among disciplines that study humans? | It is holistic and comparative. | |
302624324 | What is a critical element of cultural traditions? | Their transmission through learning rather than through biological inheritance. | |
302624325 | Over time, how has human reliance on cultural means of adaptation changed? | Humans have become increasingly more dependent on them. | |
302624326 | The fact that anthropology focuses on both culture and biology ... | allows it to address how culture influences biological traits and vice versa. | |
302624327 | In Chapter 1, what is the point of describing the ways humans cope with low oxygen pressure at high altitudes? | To illustrate human capacities for cultural and biological adaptation, variation, and change. | |
302624328 | Four field anthropology... | was largely shaped by early American anthropologists' interests in Native Americans. | |
302624329 | The study of nonhuman primates is of special interest to which sub-discipline of anthropology? | Biological anthropology. | |
302624330 | About practicing or applied anthropology, this is false. | It is less relevant for archaeology since archaeology typically concerns the material culture of societies that no longer exist. | |
302624331 | What term is defined as a suggested but yet unverified explanation for observed things and events? | Hypothesis. | |
302624332 | The scientific method... | Characterizes any anthropological endeavour that formulates research questions and gathers or uses systematic data to test hypothesis. |