cultural anthropology
True
A key concern in the 1850s that shaped the discipline of anthropology was the emergence of a new scientific theory called "evolution.
false
Activities that are biologically based, such as eating and sleeping, are universally practiced in the same way for all humans.
False
All humans are born with some culture
False
Anthropologist generally believe in one unified theory of culture.
False
Anthropologists do not use the scientific method at all.
False
Anthropologists have no ethical obligations to their informant communities.
Integrated
Because our values and beliefs include many elements of life such as clothes, food, and language means that culture is
False
Contemporary cultural anthropologists rank societies along an evolutionary scale from "primitive" to "advanced" to categorize human diversity.
True
Cultural appropriation involves relationships of power.
True
Culture consists of the collective processes that make the artificial seem natural.
Learned and shared
Culture is
True
Diversity, defined anthropologically, refers to both multiplicity and variety, which is not the same thing as "difference."
Cultural Relativism
The moral and intellectual principle that one should withhold judgment about seemingly strange or exotic beliefs and practices is called
Traditions
The most enduring and ritualized aspects of culture are referred to as
Holism
The perspective that aims to identify and understand cultures in their entirety is called
Enculturation
The process of learning culture from a very young age is called
Linguistic anthropologists study
How our language evolved, how our mouths form words, and how indigenous people classify their social worlds
Refers to the practice of comparing two or more cultures
The comparative method
Cultural Anthropology
The subfield of anthropology that studies human diversity, beliefs, and practices is called
Archaeology
The subfield of anthropology that studies the material remains of past cultures is called