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1.1.6: Key Terms

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    136371
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    Belief (religious): A firmly held opinion or conviction typically based on spiritual apprehension rather than empirical proof.

    Bipedal: Habitually using only two legs to walk.

    Cultural relativism: The anthropological practice of suspending judgment and seeking to understand another culture on its own terms sympathetically enough so that the culture appears to be a coherent and meaningful design for living.

    Empirical: Evidence that is verifiable by observation or experience instead of relying primarily on logic or theory.

    Ethnocentrism: The opinion that one’s own way of life is natural or correct and the only true way of being fully human.

    Faith (religious): Complete trust or confidence in the doctrines of a religion, typically based on spiritual apprehension rather than empirical proof.

    Historical archaeologists: Archaeologists who excavate and analyze material remains to supplement a society’s written records.

    Holism: The idea that the parts of a system interconnect and interact to make up the whole.

    Hominins: Species that are regarded as human, directly ancestral to humans, or very closely related to humans.

    Human variation: The range of forms of any human characteristic, such as body shape or skin color.

    Human adaptation: The ways in which human bodies, people, or cultures change, often in ways better suited to the environment or social context.

    Hypothesis: Explanation of observed facts; explains how and why observed phenomena are the way they are. Scientific hypotheses rely on empirical evidence, are testable, and are able to be refuted.

    Indigenous: Refers to people who are the original settlers of a given region and have deep ties to that place. Also known as First Peoples, Aboriginal Peoples, or Native Peoples, these populations are in contrast to other groups who have settled, occupied, or colonized the area more recently.

    Knowledge system: A unified way of knowing that is shared by a group of people and is used to explain and predict phenomena.

    Law: A prediction about what will happen given certain conditions; typically mathematical.

    Participant observation: A research method common in cultural anthropology that involves living with, observing, and participating in the same activities as the people one studies.

    Prehistoric archaeologists: Archaeologists who survey, excavate, and analyze material remains to study civilizations that lacked written records.

    Sapir-Whorf hypothesis: The principle that the language you speak allows you to think about some things and not other things. This is also known as the linguistic relativity hypothesis.

    Scholarly peer review: The process where an author’s work must pass the scrutiny of other experts in the field before being published in a journal or book.

    Subdiscipline: These refer to the four major areas that make up the discipline of anthropology: biological anthropology, cultural anthropology, archaeology, and linguistic anthropology.

    Subfield: In this book, subfield refers to the different specializations within biological anthropology, including primatology, paleoanthropology, molecular anthropology, bioarchaeology, forensic anthropology, and human biology.

    Theory: An explanation of observations that typically addresses a wide range of phenomena.

    Understanding (scientific): Knowledge accumulated by systematic scientific study, supported by rigorous testing and organized by general principles.


    1.1.6: Key Terms is shared under a CC BY-NC license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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