by wisconsin_cur » Fri 20 Jun 2008, 20:59:46
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ludi', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('wisconsin_cur', 'I') can question some of their conclusions that do not seem to have a large enough base of support in science just as I would an economist or a historian who comes to conclusions that do not seem to account for the sparcity of evidence to reach the conclusions they make.
I think you'd need to know how they compared their samples to know if they didn't account for the sparsity of evidence.
Do you feel the physical anthropologists studying hunter-gatherers do not have a large enough base in science? What is your evidence for this opinion, if I might ask? You say you are familiar with history, but not with anthropology, so, I guess I'm curious how you came by your conclusions.
Not in a "scientific way" but the same way I judge a lot of conclusions I wait until I hear them talk about something I do know about and how well they do. Anthropologist have fallen down on this account a couple of times, just like every other profession when they start talking about things they know nothing about. When economists talk about the physics of energy or the geology of oil wells; or when pastors start talking about politics or when my mother in law opens her mouth on nearly any issue.
To the issue at hand, I do not know what the evidence is or how they discerned it.
I do know that hunter gathering does not leave as big a footprint as settled society.
I do know a lot more effort has been put into studying the footprints of settled society than hunter gatherers.
I do know that hunter/gatherers are not monolithic (Inuit vs Austrialia versus North American Native.
I'll go out on a limb as say that at least those who wandered as part of their hunting and gathering did not bury their dead in one place. Pops mentioned "starving time" in another thread, our (taking kinship with the settled) bury our people in the same place no matter when they died... and often times buried our people in the same place across many centuries. Perhaps some hunter/gatherers did also... but all of them?
I also know that I am asked to believe monolithic conclusions about very diverse populations that do not receive the funding or the sum total of brain power (due to less people studying it not their individual intelligence) as what they are contrasting against, then yes I am suspicious.
For that matter I am also suspicious of economists, historians, theologians, politicians, physicists (they want to make small black holes?), urban planners, engineers, business people, doctors, and lots of other folks who forget that there is more to the world than their individual specialty and that we all jump to conclusions that we cannot substantiate.
Their's (and mine) is the sin of hubris. They don't know what they don't know and they sub-consciously or consciously fill in blanks in order to keep from admitting what they do know that they do not know.