On Anthropological Knowledge: Three Essays

Cambridge University Press (1985)
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Abstract

What can be understood of other cultures? And what can we learn about people in general from the study of other cultures? In the three closely related essays that constitute this book and which have already created considerable controversy in their original French versions, and been rewritten and expanded for this edition, Dan Sperber discusses these fundamental issues of anthropology. In the first essay he analyses the way in which anthropology is written and read. In the second, he offers a novel rationalist alternative to cultural relativism, based on both anthropological and psychological arguments, and illustrated by his own fieldwork in Ethiopia. The third essay provides an assessment of the work of Lévi-Strauss, in which the arguments of the previous two essays are linked with an incisive critique of Lévi-Strauss' contribution to the study of cultural variation.

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Author's Profile

Dan Sperber
Institut Jean Nicod

Citations of this work

Illocutionary forces and what is said.M. Kissine - 2009 - Mind and Language 24 (1):122-138.
That's enough about ethnography.Tim Ingold - 2014 - Hau 4 (1):383-395.
A Cultural Evolution Approach to Digital Media.Alberto Acerbi - 2016 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 10.
The Prophet of Anthropology.Marino Niola - 2013 - Diogenes 60 (2):93-102.
A Cognitive Typology of Religious Actions.Justin Barrett & Brian Malley - 2007 - Journal of Cognition and Culture 7 (3-4):201-211.

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