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Archaeology: the most basic science of all
11
Citations
1
References
1987
Year
Archaeological TheoryArchaeological ExcavationArchaeologyReal Hard SciencesExperimental ArchaeologySocial SciencesHuman SocietiesScience StudyHistory Of ScienceBasic ScienceArchaeological RecordScience ArchaeologyLanguage StudiesMediterranean ArchaeologyArchaeological EvidenceScientific LiteracyNatural HistoryInterdisciplinary StudiesPrehistoric ArchaeologyNatural SciencesLast British MinisterScience And Technology StudiesAnthropologyScience Policy
The last British minister of education refused ever to use the phrase ‘social sciences’, since these studies were so soft – by comparison with the real hard sciences like physics – they did not count to him as sciences at all. Archaeology, sometimes accepted as a social science, is often placed in the ‘arts’ departments of universities, a conventional word which nevertheless may suggest the creative arts, rather than an attempt at rigorous empirical research. Yet, ever since Sir John Lubbock (1865: 2) said of the new prehistory of the 1860s, ‘a new Science has, so to say, been born among us’, the aspiration of archaeology to the status of a ‘real science’ has been a recurring theme within the subject. Meanwhile, its place in the academic pecking-order stays dismally low. Here a philosopher takes a fresh look at what sort of science archaeology adds up to.
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