The Ancient Mind
Elements of Cognitive Archaeology
£40.99
Part of New Directions in Archaeology
- Editors:
- Colin Renfrew, University of Cambridge
- Ezra B. W. Zubrow, State University of New York, Buffalo
- Date Published: May 1994
- availability: Available
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9780521456203
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One of the most troubling problems in archaeology is to determine the manner and content of prehistoric thought. A fundamental challenge is to develop the theory, methodology and tools to understand human cognition. Cognitive archaeology as a subject is still in its infancy, and archaeologists are adopting a variety of approaches. One direction has been to develop an 'interpretationist', anti-scientific, literary approach. Another has been to use a linguistic framework and develop a hermeneutic, semiotic approach. A third approach develops a new direction in prehistoric cognitive research which is rooted in the scientific tradition and in an empirical methodology. It draws upon the cognitive, the mathematical and the computer sciences in an attempt to understand what techniques can be used appropriately on archaeological data, and how to implement them efficiently. This is the approach adopted by the contributors to The Ancient Mind. Together, they begin to develop a science of cognitive archaeology.
Read more- First book of its kind on the still developing subject of cognitive archaeology
- Cognitive archaeology set to revolutionise archaeology in the 1990s, just as processal archaeology revolutionised the 1960s and 70s
- Excellent contributors and editors, at the forefront of recent research
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×Product details
- Date Published: May 1994
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9780521456203
- length: 212 pages
- dimensions: 246 x 189 x 11 mm
- weight: 0.39kg
- contains: 41 b/w illus. 6 maps 15 tables
- availability: Available
Table of Contents
Foreword
Part I. Introduction:
1. Towards a cognitive archaeology
Part II. The Interdisciplinary Underpinning:
2. Interpretations and testability in theories about prehistoric thinking
3. Archaeology and cognitive science
4. From mental modularity to generalized intelligence: a cognitive interpretation of the Middle/Upper Paleolithic transition
5. Are images animated? The psychology of images in Ancient Greece
Part III. Approaches to Cult Practice and Transcendental Belief Systems:
6. The archaeology of religion
7. Ancient Zapotec ritual and religion: an application of the direct historical approach
8. The meaning of death
9. Prehistoric cognition and the science of archaeology
Part IV. Prehistoric Conceptions of Space and Time:
10. Symbols and signposts: understanding the prehistoric petroglyphs of the British Isles
11. Knowledge representation and archaeology: a cognitive example using GIS
12 Dials: a study in the physical representation of cognitive systems
Part V. The Material Basis of Cognitive Inference: Technology:
13. Cognitive aspects of 'technique'
14. Mindful technology: unleashing the Chaîne Opératoire for an archaeology of mind
15. Prehistoric technology: a cognitive science?
Part VI. The Material Basis of Cognitive Inference: Writing Systems
16. Variation and change in symbol systems: case studies in Elamite Cuneiform
17. Figure and text in Mesopotamia: match and mismatch
Part VII. Conclusion:
18. Cognitive archaeology reconsidered.
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