You are currently browsing the Jon’s Anthropology Blog weblog archives for January, 2008.
- Anthropology Links (3)
- Cognitive Anthropology (15)
- 15/02/2010: New website
- 10/01/2010: Updated reading lists - belief and cognition
- 01/12/2008: S4 Anthropology of Belief - Lecture Files
- 28/11/2008: A C Grayling article: is belief in gods 'hard wired'?
- 04/11/2008: New Cognitive Anthropology Website
- 27/10/2008:
- 08/02/2008: To the students - S4 Cognitive Anthropology Course
- 08/02/2008: S4 Cognitive Anthropology - Lecture 3 - 8 February 2008
- 07/02/2008: Link to a cognitive science glossary
- 01/02/2008: Links to Institutes of Anthropology and Cognitive Science
Anth Links
- Centre for Anthropology and Mind (Oxford)
- Cognition and Culture
- Dan Sperber's Website
- Department of Social Anthropology, Cambridge University
- Institute of Cognition and Culture (Queen's University, Belfast)
- Institute of Cognitive and Evolutionary Anthropology (Oxford)
- Mongolia and Inner Asia Studies Unit, Cambridge University
- Pascal Boyer
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Archive for January 2008
Dan Sperber interview on cognitive anthropology - video
30/01/2008 by Jon.
There’s a useful, short interview with Dan Sperber at the address below…
http://www.edge.org/3rd_culture/sperber05/sperber05_index.html
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Dan Sperber’s Website
25/01/2008 by Jon.
Dan Sperber has been a prominent name in cognitive anthropology since the 70s. He has an extensive website with bibliographies and links to fulltext versions of many of his articles: <p>http://www.dan.sperber.com/
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S4 Cognitive Anthropology - Lecture 1 - 25 January 2008
25/01/2008 by Jon.
Download lecture files:
Introduction to Cognitive Anthropology - handout
Introduction to Cognitive Anthropology - PP presentation
This lecture introduced cognitive anthropology by asking how cognitive anthropologists distinguish themselves from other anthropologists and from psychologists. Cognitive psychologists argue that the standard model of cognition in anthropology is usually implicit, is vague and ambiguous, and is in conflict with scientific models of cognition on many points. But while anthropologists tend to be mind-blind, cognitive anthropologists argue, psychologists are context-blind. The attempt to exclude culturally variable context from experiments prevents psychologists from providing what cognitive anthropology promises: an ethnographic conception of the mind.
The cognitive anthropological synthesis aspires to combine the scientific rigour of psychology with the comparative, context rich perspective of anthropology.
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S4 Cognitive Anthropology - Reading Lists
25/01/2008 by Jon.
Download: S4 Cognitive Anthropology Reading List.
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