Classy Quote logo
  • Home
  • Categories
  • Authors
  • Topics
  • Who said

Anthropology Quotes

Anthropology quote from classy quote

The single most important human insight to be gained from this way of comparing societies is perhaps the realization that everything could have been different in our own society – that the way we live is only one among innumerable ways of life which humans have adopted. If we glance sideways and backwards, we will quickly discover that modern society, with its many possibilities and seducing offers, its dizzying complexity and its impressive technological advances, is a way of life which has not been tried out for long. Perhaps, psychologically speaking, we have just left the cave: in terms of the history of our species, we have but spent a moment in modern societies. (..) Anthropology may not provide the answer to the question of the meaning of life, but at least it can tell us that there are many ways in which to make a life meaningful.

~ Thomas Hylland Eriksen

Thomas Hylland Eriksen Anthropology Culture Meaning Of Life Meaningful Life Philosophy Of Life

One-third to one-half of humanity are said to go to bed hungry every night. In the Old Stone Age the fraction must have been much smaller. This is the era of hunger unprecedented. Now, in the time of the greatest technical power, is starvation an institution. Reverse another venerable formula: the amount of hunger increases relatively and absolutely with the evolution of culture.

~ Marshall Sahlins

Marshall Sahlins Anthropology Culture Evolution Hunger Hunters Starvation Stone Age Technology

[T]here are in fact no masses, but only ways of seeing people as masses.

~ Raymond Williams

Raymond Williams Anthropology Culture Masses

The more we claim to discriminate between cultures and customs as good and bad, the more completely do we identify ourselves with those we would condemn. By refusing to consider as human those who seem to us to be the most “savage” or “barbarous” of their representatives, we merely adopt one of their own characteristic attitudes. The barbarian is, first and foremost, the man who believes in barbarism.

~ Claude Lévi-Strauss

Claude Lévi-Strauss Anthropology Barbarian Barbarism Cultural Differences Cultural Relativism Culture Ethnocentrism Savage Savagery

An encounter with other cultures can lead to openness only if you can suspend the assumption of superiority, not seeing new worlds to conquer, but new worlds to respect.

~ Mary Catherine Bateson

Mary Catherine Bateson Anthropology Culture Openness

Culture is not trivial. It is not a decoration or artifice, the songs we sing or even the prayers we chant. It is a blanket of comfort that gives meaning to lives. It is a body of knowledge that allows the individual to make sense out of the infinite sensations of consciousness, to find meaning and order in a universe that ultimately has neither. Culture is a body of laws and traditions, a moral and ethical code that insulates a people from the barbaric heart that lies just beneath the surface of all human societies and indeed all human beings. Culture alone allows us to reach, as Abraham Lincoln said, for the better angels of our nature.

~ Wade Davis

Wade Davis Anthropology Culture

The full measure of a culture embraces both the actions of a people and the quality of their aspirations, the nature of the metaphors that propel their lives. And no description of a people can be complete without reference to the character of their homeland, the ecological and geographical matrix in which they have determined to live out their destiny. Just as a landscape defines character, culture springs from a spirit of place.

~ Wade Davis

Wade Davis Anthropology Culture

I did not see Pirahã teenagers moping, sleeping in late, refusing to accept responsibility for their own actions, or trying out what they considered to be radically new approaches to life. They in fact are highly productive and conformist members of their community in the Pirahã sense of productivity (good fishermen, contributing generally to the security, food needs, and other aspects of the physical survival of the community). One gets no sense of teenage angst, depression, or insecurity among the Pirahã youth. They do not seem to be searching for answers. They have them. And new questions rarely arise.

~ Daniel L. Everett

Daniel L. Everett Anthropology Culture Growing Up Teenagers Teens

Literalness, however, is not the substance from which human culture is made.

~ Begoña Aretxaga

Begoña Aretxaga Anthropology Culture Gender Northern Ireland Politics Resistance

It's because there are too many people who want to stop us having fun. That's the reason.

~ Alexander Mccall Smith

Alexander Mccall Smith Anthropology Culture Fun Fun Not Banned Yet

We live in a culture of complaint because everyone is always looking for things to complain about. It's all tied in with the desire to blame others for misfortunes and to get some form of compensation into the bargain.

~ Alexander Mccall Smith

Alexander Mccall Smith Anthropology Complaints Culture U S Education

Understanding a people's culture exposes their normalness without reducing their particularity...It renders them accessible: setting them in the frame of their own banalities, it dissolves their opacity.

~ Clifford Geertz

Clifford Geertz Anthropology Culture Geertz

The notion of dream interpretation far antedates the birth of psychoanalysis, and probably served an important function in most, if not all, historical societies. In having lost this function, modern man has also lost the best part of his nature, which he obliviously passes on to the next generation of dreamers.

~ Neel Burton

Neel Burton Anthropology Culture Dream Interpretation Psychoanalysis

People who have made comparative studies of many different societies, know that when status is ascribed, rather than achieved, individual efforts towards excellence are not directed through any form of innovation; rather, the enhancement of status occurs only through the realisation of a previously well defined role position. It is only with social change, or when some form of continual dynamic disequilibium occurs in a society, that we begin to observe the development of achievement motivation in its modern form.

~ Dor Bahadur Bista

Dor Bahadur Bista Anthropology Culture Nepal

What we mean when we say that something is cultural is that it is roughly similar to what we find in other members of the particular group we are considering, and unlike what we would find in members of a contrast group. This is why it is confusing to say that people share a culture, as if culture were common property. We may have strictly identical amounts of money in our respective wallets without sharing any of it!

~ Pascal Boyer

Pascal Boyer Anthropology Culture

Yes, it is true that one generally needs to speak to the members of the key audience for a product or service. But as we are not trying to plumb an individual psyche for psychological motivation, but are rather trying to elucidate the relevant symbolic cultural meanings and practices, information garnered from those who do not like something is also relevant to understanding the cultural picture. In fact, contestation between points of view and meanings is a crucial aspect of the social dynamic. These nodal points of disagreement and different points of view can be precisely the most intriguing domains of cultural movement and thus new opportunities.

~ Patricia L. Sunderland

Patricia L. Sunderland Anthropology Culture Ethnography Research Social

The classical anthropological question, What is man?—how like an angel, this quintessence of dust!—is not now asked by anthropologists. Instead, they commence with a chapter on Physical Anthropology and then forget the whole topic and go on to Culture.

~ Paul Goodman

Paul Goodman Academia Anthropology Man

From a historical point of view, restricting the availability of addictive substances must be seen as a peculiarly perverse example of Calvinist dominator thought - a system in which the sinner is to be punished in this world by being transformed into an exploitable, of his cash, by the criminal/governmental combine that provides the addicitve substances. The image is more horrifying than that of the serpent that devours itself - it is once again the Dionysian image of the mother who devours her children, the image of a house divided against itself.

~ Terence Mckenna

Terence Mckenna Anthropology Drug Use Evolution Human Politics

The Greenland fjords are peculiar for the spells of completely quiet weather, when there is not enough wind to blow out a match and the water is like a sheet of glass. The kayak hunter must sit in his boat without stirring a finger so as not to scare the shy seals away. Actually, he can only move his eyes, as even the slightest move otherwise might mean game lost. The sun, low in the sky, sends a glare into his eyes, and the landscape around moves into the realm of the unreal. The reflex from the mirror-like water hypnotizes him, he seems to be unable to move, and all of a sudden it is as if he were floating in a bottomless void, sinking, sinking, and sinking.... Horror-stricken, he tries to stir, to cry out, but he cannot, he is completely paralyzed, he just falls and falls.

~ Peter Freuchen

Peter Freuchen Anthropology Imagery Silence Surreal

I am perhaps more proud of having helped to redeem the character of the cave-man than of any other single achievement of mine in the field of anthropology.

~ Henry Fairfield Osborn

Henry Fairfield Osborn Achievements Anthropology Biology Cave Man Character Evolution Human Evolution Science

I simply would not accede to being forced into this, and would frequently be kept out of classes because of irreverent comments and mocking this religious stuff. Frankly, it stayed with me to this day. In fact, don't get me going. I'm almost as bad as Richard Dawkins on this issue.

~ Richard E. Leakey

Richard E. Leakey Anthropology Atheism Atheist Biology Dawkins Evolution Irreverent Mocking Religion Paleontology Richard Dawkins Science

Inside our skulls are fish, reptile and shrew brains, as well as the highest centers that allow us to integrate information in our unique way; and some of our newer brain components talk to each other via some very ancient structures indeed. Our brains are makeshift structures, opportunistically assembled by Nature over hundreds of millions of years, and in multiple different ecological contexts.

~ Ian Tattersall

Ian Tattersall Anthropology Evolution

But because humans are intensely social animals, they also faced a recurring set of crucial social evolutionary challenges. These evolutionary challenges include (1) evading physical harm, (2) avoiding disease, (3) making friends, (4) gaining status, (5) attracting a mate, (6) keeping that mate, and (7) caring for family.

~ Vladas Griskevicius

Vladas Griskevicius Anthropology Evolution Social Animals

Every effort to understand destroys the object studied in favor of another object of a different nature; this second object requires from us a new effort which destroys it in favor of a third, and so on and so forth until we reach the one lasting presence, the point at which the distinction between meaning and the absence of meaning disappears: the same point from which we began.

~ Claude Lévi-Strauss

Claude Lévi-Strauss Anthropology Buddhism Marxism Postcolonialism

Human beings disappear, their histories remain.

~ Bernard Stiegler

Bernard Stiegler Anthropology History Human Being Philosophy Technics Technology

The technology is the independent variable, the social system the dependent variable. Social, systems are therefore determined by systems of technology; as the latter change, so do the former.

~ Leslie White

Leslie White Anthropology Science Social System Technology Variable

There are savages without God in any proper sense of the word, but none without ghosts.

~ Thomas Henry Huxley

Thomas Henry Huxley Anthropology Beliefs Ghosts Gods Savages Science Superstition Theism Theology

Elohim was, in logical terminology, the genus of which ghosts, Chemosh, Dagon, Baal, and Jahveh were species. The Israelite believed Jahveh to be immeasurably superior to all other kinds of Elohim. The inscription on the Moabite stone shows that King Mesa held Chemosh to be, as unquestionably, the superior of Jahveh.

~ Thomas Henry Huxley

Thomas Henry Huxley Anthropology Baal Chemosh Dagon Elohim Genus Ghosts Israelite Jahveh King Mesa Logic Science Superior Terminology Theology Yahweh

Can any one deny that the old Israelites conceived Jahveh not only in the image of a man, but in that of a changeable, irritable, and, occasionally, violent man?

~ Thomas Henry Huxley

Thomas Henry Huxley Anthropology Image Irritable Israelites Jahveh Theology Violent Yahweh

Faced with an ecological crisis whose roots lie in this disengagement, in the separation of human agency and social responsibility from the sphere of our direct involvement with the non-human environment, it surely behoves us to reverse this order of priority. I began with the point that while both humans and animals have histories of their mutual relations, only humans narrate such histories. But to construct a narrative, one must already dwell in the world and, in the dwelling, enter into relationships with its constituents, both human and non-human. I am suggesting that we rewrite the history of human-animal relations, taking this condition of active engagement, of being-in-the-world, as our starting point. We might speak of it as a history of human concern with animals, insofar as this notion conveys a caring, attentive regard, a 'being with'. And I am suggesting that those of us who are 'with' animals in their day-to-day lives, most notably hunters and herdsmen, can offer us some of the best possible indications of how we might proceed.

~ Tim Ingold

Tim Ingold Animals Anthropology Ecology Global Warming Humanity Hunter Gatherer

There were details like clothing, hair styles and the fragile objects that hardly ever survive for the archaeologist—musical instruments, bows and arrows, and body ornaments depicted as they were worn. … No amounts of stone and bone could yield the kinds of information that the paintings gave so freely.

~ Mary Leakey

Mary Leakey Anthropology Archeology Cave Paintings Clothing Early Man Humans Information Instruments Paintings Science Tools

I remember the very day, sometime during the first two weeks of my five-year amorous sojourn in Brutland, when I was made privy to one of the most arcane of their utterings. The time was ripe for that major epiphany, my initiation into the sacred knowledge—or should I say gnosis?—of that all-important, quintessentially Brutish slang term, the word that endless hours of scholastic education by renowned mentors, plus years of scrupulous scrutiny into scrofulous texts, had disappointingly failed to impart to me, leaving me with that deep sense of emptiness begotten by hemimathy; the time was finally ripe for me to be transported by the velvety feel of the unvoiced palato-alveolar fricative, the élan of the unpronounceable and masochistically hedonistic front open-rounded vowel, and, last but not least, the (admittedly short) ejaculatory quality of the voiced velar stop: all three of them combined together to form that miraculous lexical item, the word shag.

~ Spiros Doikas

Spiros Doikas Anthropology Britain British English Humor Sex Sexuality

Freuchen tells how one day, after coming home hungry from an unsuccessful walrus-hunting expedition, he found one of the successful hunters dropping off several hundred pounds of meat. He thanked him profusely. The man objected indign

~ David Graeber

David Graeber Anthropology Economics

The world's most primitive people have few possessions, but they are not poor. Poverty is not a certain small amount of goods, nor is it just a relation between means and ends; above all it is a relation between people. Poverty is a social status. As such it is the invention of civilization.

~ Marshall Sahlins

Marshall Sahlins Anthropology Economics

Scientific knowledge advances haltingly and is stimulated by contention and doubt.

~ Claude Lévi-Strauss

Claude Lévi-Strauss Anthropology Contention Doubt Knowledge Scepticism Science Scientific Knowledge Skepticism

In the United States both scholars and the general public have been conditioned to viewing human races as natural and separate divisions within the human species based on visible physical differences. With the vast expansion of scientific knowledge in this century, however, it has become clear that human populations are not unambiguous, clearly demarcated, biologically distinct groups. Evidence from the analysis of genetics (e.g. DNA) indicates that most physical variation, about 94%, lies within so-called racial groups. Conventional geographic racial groupings differ from one another only in about 6% of their genes. This means that there is greater variation within racial groups than between them. In neighboring populations there is much overlapping of genes and their phenotypic (physical) expressions. Throughout history whenever different groups have come into contact, they have interbred. The continued sharing of genetic materials has maintained all of humankind as a single species.

~ American Anthropological Association

American Anthropological Association Anthropology Humankind Race

I have researched aboriginal culture, Mayan hieroglyphics and the corporate culture of a Japanese car manufacturer, and I have written essays on the internal logic of various other societies, but I haven't a clue about my own logic.

~ Deborah Levy

Deborah Levy Anthropology Deborah Levy Hot Milk Logic

Anyhow, many people in the soft sciences are prone to be wrong because they’re crazy** some are dumb, too, but that’s another story.

~ Gregory Cochran

Gregory Cochran Anthropology Crazy Dumb Insanity Science Soft Sciences Stupid Stupidity

These people know the reality and laugh at it. Such laughter has little concern with what is funny. It is often bitter and sometimes a little mad, for it is the laugh under the mask of tragedy, and also the laughter that masks tears. They are the same. It is the laughter of people who value love and friendship and plenty, who have lived with terror and death and hate. - , Return to Laughter (1954)

~ Elenore Smith Bowen

Elenore Smith Bowen Anthropology Bowen Laughter

The larger the pile of rubble you leave behind, the larger your place in the historical record!

~ James C. Scott

James C. Scott Anthropology Archeology Civilization Garbage
Load More classy quote icon
  • Classy Quote

    ClassyQuote has been providing 500000+ famous quotes from 40000+ popular authors to our worldwide community.

  • Other Pages

    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Use
  • Our Products

    • Chrome Extention
    • Microsoft Edge Add-on
  • Follow Us

    • Facebook
    • Instagram
Copyright © 2025 ClassyQuote. All rights reserved.