An Anthropology of Knowledge
Author(s) -
Fredrik Barth
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
current anthropology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.294
H-Index - 110
eISSN - 1537-5382
pISSN - 0011-3204
DOI - 10.1086/324131
Subject(s) - relativism , cultural relativism , sociology , epistemology , construct (python library) , ethnography , racism , social knowledge , applied anthropology , scope (computer science) , perspective (graphical) , anthropology , social science , political science , human rights , philosophy , gender studies , law , computer science , artificial intelligence , programming language
Whereas previous Sidney Mintz lectures have celebrated Mintz’swork on inequality, racism, and ethnicity, I have chosen to speakto the broadest scope of his research and teaching in anthropology.A comparative perspective on human knowledge allows usto unravel a number of aspects of the cultural worlds which peopleconstruct. I argue that knowledge always has three faces: asubstantive corpus of assertions, a range of media of representation,and a social organization. Using ethnographic materialsfrom New Guinea and Bali and also from our own universities, Itry to show how in different traditions of knowledge these faceswill interrelate in particular ways and generate tradition-specificcriteria of validity for knowledge about the world. Thus the trajectoryof a tradition of knowledge will be to a large extent endogenouslydetermined. This implies not a diffuse relativism of“anything goes” but a relativism in which we can demonstratehow already established thoughts, representations, and social relationsto a considerable extent configure and filter our individualhuman experience of the world around us and thereby generateculturally diverse worldviews
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