anthropology puzzle
Across
- 3. a British anthropologist, whose Primitive Culture (1871) is among the most influential books ever written in its field.
- 7. Bastian was a German theorist of psychic unity who believed that a few fundamental ideas were the building blocks of culture.
- 8. has been increased and perfected by a series of successive arts introduced at long intervals of time
- 9. is a domain where mostly no historical facts are available except those that may be revealed by archeological study.
- 14. generally adopted by modern anthropologists
- 16. replaced universal laws and emphasizes specific histories of societies
- 18. are the dynamic changes in society that may be observed at the present time.
- 19. of cultural particularities is an important arm of anthropology
- 20. reflect a faith is science and belief that knowledge will yield progress
- 23. gradual accumulation of experimental knowledge
- 24. balances out various interests and concedes to each class as much as consists with the good of the rest
Down
- 1. Represent previous stages of human development
- 2. may be divided to 3 sub-periods respectively, the older, the middle and the later period
- 4. is a growth and not a manufacture
- 5. was based on the old testament book of Genesis (Morgan’s “Mosaic cosmogony”)
- 6. is a key aspect of Boas’ theoretical position
- 10. its magical trick is to make its assumptions appear natural and true
- 11. persue the more ambitions schema of discovering the laws and the history of the evolution of human society
- 12. shifted the concept of culture from a synonym for civilization to a plural sense
- 13. is a theory of cultural progression first espoused by early anthropologists and social theorists like L.H. Morgan
- 15. referred not only to technological progress but also to moral development
- 17. proposed to trace the development of interventions and discoveries but considered them subordinate to the development of primary institutions.
- 21. provides a lens through which we interpret the world
- 22. should have a goal to identify social “organs” and describe their functioning