Results for 'Ethnology '

516 found
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  1.  32
    Ethnology of Religion.Liudmyla O. Fylypovych - 1999 - Ukrainian Religious Studies 10:74-87.
    The ethnology of religion as a relatively new discipline and a separate branch of religious studies, which arose as a result of interdisciplinary study of ethnos and religion, studies various aspects of their interaction. First, within the framework of the ethnology of religion, terminological and semantic problems are solved: how to define and which semantics to put into the concept of ethnos and religion, ethnic religion, national religion, national church, and others like that. Secondly, this science considers the (...)
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  2.  14
    Ethnology of religion is a topical sphere of Ukrainian religious studies.Liudmyla O. Fylypovych - 2006 - Ukrainian Religious Studies 40:31-46.
    The ethnology of religion is a relatively young field of religious studies that emerged as a result of an interdisciplinary study of ethnicity and religion. It is she who studies the great variety of aspects of the interaction and combination of these social phenomena, although, as is well known, religion and ethnicity are the object of attention of various branches of science - religious studies, ethnology, anthropology, ethnography, cultural studies, history, etc. Each of them in their context analyzes (...)
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  3.  19
    Ethnological Imagination: A Cross-Cultural Critique of Modernity.Fuyuki Kurasawa - 2004 - Univ of Minnesota Press.
    In the work of these thinkers, Kurasawa finds little justification for two of the most prevalent claims about social theory: the wholesale "postmodern" dismissal of the social-theoretical enterprise because of its supposedly intractable ...
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  4.  26
    Erasmus’ ethnological hierarchy of peoples and races.Nathan Ron - 2018 - History of European Ideas 44 (8):1063-1075.
    ABSTRACTNo comprehensive research of Erasmus’ ethnological mind has been published, so far. Erasmus’ attitudes toward Turks and Jews were discussed analytically but not synthetically or comparatively. An attempt to widen the ethnological scope and to define and classify Erasmus’ attitudes toward different non-Christian groups is presented here. Christian Europeans were at the top of Erasmus’ echelon. Second to them were ‘half-Christians’, i.e. Turks, or Muslims in general. Below them were Jews, and lower in the hierarchy were black Africans. Yet, no (...)
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  5.  37
    Ethnology and colonial administration in nineteenth-century British India: the question of native crime and criminality.Mark Brown - 2003 - British Journal for the History of Science 36 (2):201-219.
    This paper examines the central role of ethnology, the science of race, in the administration of colonial India. This occurred on two levels. First, from the late eighteenth century onwards, proto-scientists and administrators in India engaged with metropolitan theorists through the provision of data on native society and habits. Second, these same agents were continually and reciprocally influenced in the collection and use of such data by the political doctrines and scientific theories that developed over the course of this (...)
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  6.  25
    The ethnocentric gaze: From ethnology to ethnophilosophy to “Africa”.Adeshina Afolayan - 2018 - South African Journal of Philosophy 37 (3):312-321.
    In this essay I deploy Sartre's phenomenology of the gaze as the foil to demonstrate the cultural and philosophical movement from ethnology to ethnophilosophy that produces a specific conception of Africa. The violence of the Western gaze on Africa led several ethnological and anthropological excavations of Africa's cultural beingness, and the eventual creation of ethnophilosophical reason. Despite the obvious limitations of ethnophilosophy, I argue in this essay for a conception of cultural agency around which we can properly understand “Africa” (...)
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  7.  22
    Ethnology of Ancient BhārataEthnology of Ancient Bharata.Friedrich Wilhelm & Ram Chandra Jain - 1972 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 92 (4):573.
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  8.  35
    Ethnological "Lie" and Mythical "Truth"Violence and the Sacred.Hayden White, Rene Girard & Patrick Gregory - 1978 - Diacritics 8 (1):2.
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  9.  45
    “Psychoanalysis and Ethnology” Revisited: Foucault's Historicization of History.Amy Allen - 2017 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 55 (S1):31-46.
    This article re-examines the closing sections of Michel Foucault's The Order of Things in order to address the longstanding question of whether he is best understood as a philosopher or a historian. My central argument is that this question misses the crucial point of Foucault's work, which is to historicize the notion of history, which Foucault takes to be central to the historical a priori of modernity. An examination of his historicization of History thus reveals that Foucault is neither simply (...)
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  10.  12
    Ethnology in 1500: Polydore Vergil's Collection of Customs.Margaret Hodgen - 1966 - Isis 57 (3):315-324.
  11.  41
    Ethnological Jurisprudence.Albert Hermann Post - 1891 - The Monist 2 (1):31-40.
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  12.  53
    On relations between ethnology and psychology in historical context.Gustav Jahoda - 2014 - History of the Human Sciences 27 (4):3-21.
    Ever since records began, accounts of other peoples and their institutions and customs have included comments about their mental characteristics. The present article traces this feature from the 18th century to roughly the First World War, with a brief sketch of more recent developments. For most of this period two contrasting positions prevailed: the dominant one attributed human differences to ‘race’, while the other one explained them in terms of psychological, environmental and historical factors. The present account focuses on the (...)
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  13. The Ethnological Notebooks.Karl Marx & Lawrence Krader - 1979 - Revista Portuguesa de Filosofia 35 (1):195-196.
     
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  14. Panorama of Ethnology I950-I952.Claude Lévi-Strauss - 1953 - Diogenes 1 (2):69-92.
    A panorama of ethnological studies during the last two or three years must cover considerations as apparently remote as the margin of error in estimating the age of radio-active elements on the one hand and, on the other, the question of whether ethnology originates from the sciences of Man or the sciences of Nature. This widening of the scope of ethnological studies is matched by the widening of public interest in ethnological problems, or, to put it more precisely, in (...)
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  15.  72
    History of Religion Becomes Ethnology: Some Evidence from Peiresc's Africa.Peter N. Miller - 2006 - Journal of the History of Ideas 67 (4):675-696.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Journal of the History of Ideas 67.4 (2006) 675-696 MuseSearchJournalsThis JournalContents[Access article in PDF]History of Religion Becomes Ethnology: Some Evidence from Peiresc's AfricaPeter N. Miller Bard Graduate CenterAbstractThe relationship between history of religion and ethnology on the one hand, and antiquarianism and them both, on the other, lie at the core of this essay. These lines of inquiry come together in the work of Nicolas Fabri de (...)
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  16.  26
    Hacker on Wittgenstein’s Ethnological Approach.Lars Hertzberg - 2010 - In Eric Lemaire & Jesús Padilla Gálvez (eds.), Wittgenstein: Issues and Debates. De Gruyter. pp. 117-126.
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  17.  23
    The method and theory of ethnology.Paul Radin - 1966 - New York,: Basic Books.
    Radin's timeless critique of anthropological theory and methods from a humanistic perspective provides an overall assessment of the field of ethnology, its shortcomings, errors, and misdirections.
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  18.  51
    Preface for a Critical Realist Ethnology: Part I: The Schism and a Realist Restorative.Derek Brereton - 2004 - Journal of Critical Realism 3 (1):77-102.
    Anthropology is the study of humanness, and the tension between cultural particularity and human universals has always enlivened the sub-discipline of ethnology. For example, efforts to show that logic and emotion vary with culture raise meta-theoretical questions of ontology and epistemology. Since the Boazian and Malinowskian revolution, however, the trend has been to delineate humanness in terms suggested by a given people, avoiding the fraught terrain of species ontology. But just as there is a global ecology, so there is (...)
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  19.  6
    Psychology and Ethnology.W. H. R. Rivers - 1999 - Routledge.
    First published in 1999. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
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  20.  21
    The Bureau of American Ethnology. A Partial HistoryNeil M. Judd.William Goetzmann - 1967 - Isis 58 (4):563-563.
  21.  7
    Urban and Ethnological Seminar "Towns after 1989".Peter Salner - 1995 - Human Affairs 5 (2):193-193.
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  22.  31
    Matrilineal inheritance: Sociobiological versus ethnological interpretations.Chet S. Lancaster - 1985 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 8 (4):676-677.
  23.  17
    Nietzsche's Philosophical Ethnology.Raymond Geuss - 2017 - Arion 24 (3):89.
  24.  50
    Freud's Speculations in Ethnology.G. Elliott Smith - 1923 - The Monist 33 (1):81-97.
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  25.  23
    The Philosophical Background of Ethnological Theory.G. Elliot Smith - 1927 - Humana Mente 2 (6):182-189.
    Every student of the early history of mankind, and their numbers have greatly increased of recent years, must be well acquainted with the recent conflict between the advocates of diffusion in interpreting the origins and world-wide manifestations of civilization and those of independent development, or, in more exact terms, of the spontaneous generation of cultures. To an unbiassed observer of the evidence, it must also be a matter of astonishment that the ethnologists of the latter school have for so long (...)
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  26. Anthropology: Preliminary Definition: Anthropology, Ethnology, Ethnography.Claude Lévi-Strauss - 1975 - Diogenes 23 (90):1-25.
    Anthropology cannot be distinguished from other social and human sciences by its own particular object of study. Apparently concerned with the so-called “primitive” peoples, or peoples “without writing,” it developed into a science at the same time that these peoples were declining, or at least losing their distinctive characteristics. For the last ten years or so, some anthropologists have turned to studying the so-called civilized societies. Clearly, then, anthropology issues less from the existence of a specific object of study than (...)
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  27.  15
    Publications of the American Ethnological Society.P. E. Goddard, Franz Boas, William Jones & Truman Michelson - 1920 - American Journal of Philology 41 (2):190.
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  28.  26
    Resurecting raciology? Genetic ethnology and pre-1945 anthropological race classification.Richard McMahon - 2020 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 83 (C):101242.
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  29. A Preliminary Application of Ethnological Analysis to Ethical and Meta= Ethical Theory.H. Orenstein - 1970 - In Ervin Laszlo & James Benjamin Wilbur (eds.), Human values and natural science. New York,: Gordon & Beach. pp. 4--145.
     
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  30. ""The discovery of magic. Ethnology and" sciences of the spirit" in the works of Nietzsche, Usener and Cassirer.A. Orsucci - 1999 - Rinascimento 39:95-118.
  31.  23
    Medicine and Ethnology. Selected Essays. Erwin H. Ackerknecht, H. H. Walser, H. M. Koelbing.T. Stewart - 1972 - Isis 63 (2):268-269.
  32.  35
    Psychoanalysis and Ethnology.Gilles Deleuze & Felix Guattari - 1975 - Substance 4 (11/12):170.
  33. From Etymology to Ethnology. On the Development of Stoic Allegorism.Mikołaj Domaradzki - 2011 - Archiwum Historii Filozofii I Myśli Społecznej 56.
    The purpose of the present article is to show that there is a clear line of continuity between the early Stoics’ and Cornutus’ works, as all of them assumed that the ancient mythmakers had transformed their original cosmological conceptions into anthropomorphic deities. Hence, the Stoics from Zeno to Cornutus believed that the names of the gods reflected the mode of perceiving the world that was characteristic of the people who named the gods in this way. Accordingly, the major thesis advanced (...)
     
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  34.  25
    A History of Ethnology. Fred Voget.Murray Leaf - 1978 - Isis 69 (1):102-103.
  35. Curator Emeritus of Ethnology The American Museum of Natural History.Margaret Mead - 1972 - In Peter Albertson & Margery Barnett (eds.), Managing the planet. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.,: Prentice-Hall. pp. 187.
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  36.  40
    Maori culture and modern ethnology: A preliminary survey, I.I. L. G. Sutherland - 1927 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 5 (2):81 – 93.
  37.  41
    Semiotics of culture and New Polish Ethnology.Marcin Brocki - 2003 - Sign Systems Studies 31 (1):271-277.
    The paper deals with the contemporary state of semiotic ethnology in Poland (connected with New Polish Ethnology group), its internal and external influences, its specifics, subjects and its reaction to the other theoretical propositions. The “neotribe” of New Polish Ethnology was established by few younger scholars, ethnologists in the early 1980s, in an opposition to the dominant stream of positivistic ethnology. Today they have become classics of Polish anthropology, masters that have educated a new generation of (...)
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  38.  18
    James Cowles Prichard and the Linguistic Foundations of Ethnology.Ian Stewart - 2023 - Berichte Zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte 46 (1):76-91.
    This article examines the English scholar James Cowles Prichard's attention to language and comparative philology within his wider project on the natural history of man. It reveals that linguistic evidence was among the most important elements for Prichard in his overarching scientific aim of investigating human physical diversity, and served as the evidential foundation for his ethnology. His work on Celtic comparative philology made him not only one of the earliest British adopters of German comparative grammar, but a comparative (...)
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  39.  57
    Political philosophy, ethnology, and time: a study of the notion of historical handicap.João Feres Jr - 2002 - Kriterion: Journal of Philosophy 43 (105):19-42.
  40. Psychology and Ethnology.W. H. R. Rivers - 1927 - Humana Mente 2 (5):108-112.
    First published in 1999. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
     
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  41.  26
    A Century of Controversy: Ethnological Issues from 1860 to 1960Elman R. Service.George Stocking Jr - 1986 - Isis 77 (3):533-533.
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  42.  20
    (3 other versions)Maori Culture and Modern Ethnology.I. L. G. Sutherland - 1927 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 5 (3):186.
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  43.  48
    Wittgenstein on string figures as mathematics: A modern ethnological approach to the limits of empiricism.Andrew English - 2022 - Philosophical Investigations 46 (2):135-163.
    Wittgenstein’s ‘ethnological approach’ to the philosophy of mathematics, in particular his discussion of calculation as an experiment and the limits of empiricism in mathematics, is presented against three interrelated backdrops: (1) James’ critique of Spencer’s evolutionary empiricism, specifically regarding necessary truths; (2) the Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits, led by Haddon and Rivers, whose Reports implicitly confuted Spencer; and (3) the subsequent work of Malinowski, especially his supplement to Ogden and Richards’ The Meaning of Meaning, a book sent to (...)
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  44.  43
    What else is driving ritualized behavior, besides the “hazard-precaution system”? Developmental, psychopathological, and ethnological considerations.Oana Benga & Ileana Benga - 2006 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 29 (6):615-616.
    The target article presents arguments for a motivational system dedicated exclusively to the detection of, and reaction to, particular threats to fitness, the so-called “Hazard-Precaution System,” which, according to the authors, drives ritualized behavior. We approach the issue of a motivational system from three perspectives – developmental, psychopathological, and ethnological. (Published Online February 8 2007).
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  45.  47
    The Archaic Time Perception in the Modern Times. An Ethnological Approach towards a Religious Minority.Repciuc Ioana - 2011 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 10 (30):80-101.
    The present study focuses on the religious minority arising from the implementation of the Gregorian calendar in Romania. Christian religious community of the Old Style is defined both historically and through psycho-social elements that caused the secession of belivers together with clerics from the Romanian Orthodox Church. Special attention is given to magical-religious beliefs observed with ethnological research tools, including: magical perception of time and especially of the agrarian calendar, faith in miraculous natural signs, survivals of animist religion. The study (...)
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  46.  20
    ‘Contesting Teutomania’: Robert Gordon Latham, ‘race’, ethnology and historical migrations.Oded Y. Steinberg - 2021 - History of European Ideas 47 (8):1331-1347.
    ABSTRACT The essay elucidates the intellectual and historiographical phenomenon of migration to the forefront by engaging with the perceptions of the Teutonic/germanic migrations of the fifth century among a few major Victorian ethnologists and historians. It focuses particularly on the unique view of the ethnologist and philologist Robert Gordon Latham. While many Victorian historians of the mid-nineteenth century became obsessed with the Teutonic narrative, arguing that these ancient tribes had conquered vast territories of Europe, Latham, in contrast, downplayed the impact (...)
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  47. He Wasn’t Man Enough: Black Male Studies and the Ethnological Targeting of Black Men in 19th Century Suffragist Thought.Tommy J. Curry - 2021 - In African American Studies. Edinburgh, UK: pp. 209-224.
  48.  19
    Rossel Island: An Ethnological Study.H. U. Hall & W. E. Armstrong - 1929 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 49:182.
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  49. Primitive Messianism and an Ethnological Problem.Robert H. Lowie - 1957 - Diogenes 5 (19):62-72.
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  50.  25
    Psychology and Ethnology. By W. H. R. Rivers.W. J. Perry - 1927 - Philosophy 2 (5):108.
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