Processual and Post-Processual Archaeology, Theories

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Theory

a body of ideas telling us how the world works and why it works that way

Epistemology

a sort of toolkit containing theory and analytical methods for turning static items into dynamic people

Cultural Ecology

a term coined by Julian Steward

Good Theory

an example is the 3 Age Theory

Analytic Methods

are not techniques such as radiocarbon dating, but rather ways of evaluating whether or not theories/arguments are any good

Lower-Range Theories

are vital because if they're wrong, the other theories will screw up too

Cultural Ecology

asks questions like "why do civilizations develop into states?"

Middle-Range Research

began in 1970 to develop "transformation theories" that translated material remains into relatively objective statements into the past

Post-Processual Archaeology

can find a sort of "objectivity" by attempting to remove their own preconceptions (and acknowledging that they will always have some influence)

Post-Processual Archaeology

despite seeming unscientific, still tries to come up with ideas that make sense, uses a sort of "trial by jury" to allow interpretations to be continually refined through a process of always confronting earlier knowledge and never assuming a final solution has been reached

Post-Processual Archaeology

does not see adaptation and least-effort solutions as explaining everything, instead notes that people may well do whatever they want/believe they have to even if that isn't very efficient

Post-Processual Archaeology

does not see objectivity as easy to attain or even possible, noting that you may be left with no real truths but simple clouds of data

Post-Processual Archaeology

doesn't start from hypotheses but tries to understand cultures based on the context of archaeological artifacts

Post-Processual Archaeology

exchews scientific method for alternatives like the hermeunetic method (inductive vs. deductive)

3 Age Theory

explained not only how different materials were found in chronology, but also why some stone items and bronze items had similar styles (b/c they were at the beginning of bronze age/end of stone age)

Processual Archaeology

favours the lowest-effort solutions, assuming people are doing what's most efficient for them (and thus that different groups of people may come to the same solution separately)

Epistemology

finding out what you can know and how you can know it

Processual Archaeology

focuses on behaviour, not ideas

Post-Processual Archaeology

focuses on ideas, meanings and symbols, noting that people make their cultures somewhat deliberately

Post-Processual Archaeology

focuses on particulars, cultural differences, relativism (and even hyper-relativism, studying people instead of societies

Lower-Range Theories

if they're not good enough, it may be impossible to tell, for example, if a site's summer and winter houses means that it was being used year-round or that it was at first used only in the winter, and then only in the summer

Lower-Range Theories

include the law of superposition, radiocarbon dating and the three age theory

Higher-Range Theories

include theories about how cultures work, why they are similar/different, and why they change

Middle-Range Theories

include transformational theories, site-formation process theories, ethnoarchaeological theories, and experimental archaeological theories

Analytic Methods

include using multiple lines of independent evidence and using the scientific method

Post-Processual Archaeology

includes Americans such as Mark P. Leone and James Deetz, and British men such as Hodder, Tilley and Shanks

Experimental Archaeology

includes creation of stone tools and recreation of potential ancient construction methods

Middle-Range Research

includes experimental archaeology and ethnoarchaeology

Processual Archaeology

interested in explanation, generalization, culture process, and the pursuit of objectivity

Behaviour as an Extra-Somatic Adaptation

is an attractive way of explaining things because the archaeological record usually consists of technological data, and environmental data is similarly attainable

Culture in Post-Processual Archaeology

is not a rigid system, but something which is changed based on the goals of people even if the environment and technologies remain the same

Culture in Post-Processual Archaeology

is not seen as having systematically recognizeable parts

Culture in Processual Archaeology

is seen as a layer cake with a technological base (with the environment as a plate) supporting those things on top of them

Culture in Processual Archaeology

is seen as a rigid and well-integrated system where individuals are "prisoners"

Culture in Processual Archaeology

is seen as consisting of three subsystems: technological, sociological, and ideological

Good Theory

is testable and falsifiable

Post-Processual Archaeology

led by Hodder who was influenced by historian R.G. Collingwood

Culture in Post-Processual Archaeology

may have technology influencing ideology or ideologies influencing technologies

Processual Archaeology

may not realize its own biases because it believes so much in objectivity

Good Theory

not only explains known things, but predicts new things

Trading Systems: Trading Something Away, Getting The Same Thing In Return (Idealist View)

perhaps there was no functional purpose... people may have simply liked to have different styles of those tools for artistic reasons

Lower-Range Theories

relate to chronology and come from chemists, geologists and archaeologists

Higher-Range Theories

relate to cultural process and come from anthropologists

Middle-Range Theories

relate to cultural systems and come from archeologists, geologists and archaeologists

Shanks and Tilley

said that all people can really do is project the present onto the past and use it to justify what's happening in modernity

Kent Flannery

said you should look for the best explanation you can, but also recognize you'll probably be proven wrong at some point

Patrilineal and Matrilineal Systems in Hunter-Gatherer Societies

seen as being the result of technologies and environments, though this wasn't the greatest explanation

Processual Archaeology

sees archaeology as a science, often includes prehistoric archaeologists

Post-Processual Archaeology

sees archaeology as humanistic/historical

Processual Archaeology

sees behaviour as an extra-somatic adaptation, used to produce food and solve conflicts

Processual Archaeology

sees culture as part of the natural world, rational adapted to the material conditions of life (inspired by Lewis Binford/Leslie White)

Cultural Ecology

sees that technology and environment cannot account for social systems and ideologies themselves, but if put together they may well form a similar sort of society

Good Theory

simplifies a wide range of complicated things

Technological Subsystem

the "base" or "infrastructure" of culture as understood by Processualists, which relates people and their environments

Sociological Subsystem

the "structure" of culture as understood by Processualists, which relates people with each other

Ideological Subsystem

the "superstructure" of culture as understood by Processualists, which relates people with their world and cosmos, through not only religion, but also music, science, and dance

Boundary Conditions

the appropriate context for a hypothesis, recognizing that you should test things with all other things equal

Archaeological Signature

the physical marks/artifacts that a process leaves to be picked up by archaeologists in the future

Cultural Ecology

the study of human adaptations to social and physical environments

The Development of Early States

theoretically caused by the need for irrigation in dry environments and how its success relied on a complex decision-making network led by someone greater

Caches of Elaborate Stone Tools in N.A. (Materialist View)

these were mere caches, because the Clovis people didn't know if they would be able to find good raw materials for tools in their new country

Caches of Elaborate Stone Tools in N.A. (Idealist View)

they may have had some sort of sacred purpose

Trading Systems: Trading Something Away, Getting The Same Thing In Return (Materialist View)

this was a valuable way of creating social ties, what specifically was being exchanged wasn't important

Lewis Binford

thought it was impossible to determine what people thought, and didn't bother to try

Processual Archaeology

traditionally focused on only a particular deductive form of the scientific method, though it is now open to inductive methods as well

Processual Archaeology

uses a materialist, external approach that tries to understand from the outside

Post-Processual Archaeology

uses an idealist, internal approach that attempts to explain history from the viewpoint of those who lived it

Ethnoarchaeology

working with living peoples to see the material remains they create, etc.


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