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Human Thought and Social Organization - Anthropology on a New Plane (Hardcover)
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Human Thought and Social Organization - Anthropology on a New Plane (Hardcover)
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Human beings have two outstanding characteristics compared to all
other species: the apparently enormous elaboration of our thought
through language and symbolism and the elaboration of our forms of
social organization. The view taken in Human Thought and Social
Organization: Anthropology on a New Plane is that these are
intimately interconnected. To understand this connection, the book
compares the structure of the systems of thought that organizations
are built upon with the organizational basis of human thinking as
such. An experimental method is used, leading to a new science of
the structure of human social organizations in two senses. First,
it gives rise to a new kind of ethnology that has the combination
of empirical solidity and formal analytical rigor associated with
the "paradigmatic" sciences. Second, it makes evident that social
organizations have distinctive properties and require distinctive
explanations of a sort that cannot be reduced to the explanations
drawn from, or grounded in, these other sciences. Human social
organizations are created by people using systems of ideas with
very specific logical properties. This book describes what these
idea-systems are with an unbroken chain of analysis that begins
with field elicitation, and continues by working out their most
fundamental, logico-mathematical generative elements. This enables
us to see precisely how these idea systems are used to generate
organizations that give pattern to ongoing behavior. The book shows
how organizations are objectified by community members through
symbolic representations that provide them with shared conceptions
of organizations, roles, or relations that they see each other as
participating in. The case for this constructive process being
pan-Homo sapiens is described, spanning all human communities from
the Upper Paleolithic to today, and from the most seemingly
primitive Australian tribes to modern-day America and India. While
focusing primarily on kinship, Human Thought and Social
Organization shows how the analysis applies with equal precision to
other social areas ranging from farming to political factionalism.
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