Description

Book Synopsis
Human beings have two outstanding characteristics compared to all other species: the apparently enormous elaboration of our thought through language and symbolism and the elaboration of our forms of social organization. The view taken in Human Thought and Social Organization: Anthropology on a New Plane is that these are intimately interconnected. To understand this connection, the book compares the structure of the systems of thought that organizations are built upon with the organizational basis of human thinking as such. An experimental method is used, leading to a new science of the structure of human social organizations in two senses. First, it gives rise to a new kind of ethnology that has the combination of empirical solidity and formal analytical rigor associated with the paradigmatic sciences. Second, it makes evident that social organizations have distinctive properties and require distinctive explanations of a sort that cannot be reduced to the explanations drawn from, or grounded in, these other sciences.Human social organizations are created by people using systems of ideas with very specific logical properties. This book describes what these idea-systems are with an unbroken chain of analysis that begins with field elicitation, and continues by working out their most fundamental, logico-mathematical generative elements. This enables us to see precisely how these idea systems are used to generate organizations that give pattern to ongoing behavior. The book shows how organizations are objectified by community members through symbolic representations that provide them with shared conceptions of organizations, roles, or relations that they see each other as participating in. The case for this constructive process being pan-Homo sapiens is described, spanning all human communities from the Upper Paleolithic to today, and from the most seemingly primitive Australian tribes to modern-day America and India. While focusing primarily on kinship, Human Thought and Social Organization shows how the analysis applies with equal precision to other social areas ranging from farming to political factionalism.

Trade Review
Continuing their collaboration, in this book Leaf and Read provide the view of kinship organization’s underlying cognitive processes and then lay out their formal analysis of kinship terminologies that should transform the field into a bona fide science equivalent to theoretical physics. It is a volume of formidable scope and clarity of exposition....This book has potentially a very wide readership and should...be on the list of cultural anthropologists, evolutionary ecologists, archaeologists, linguists, psychologists, and applied anthropologists. * Anthropos *
… Read and Leaf, in this highly stimulating book, present a novel, coherent theory about the co-evolution of human thought and language on the one hand, and human social organization on the other. They do so by shifting the perspective from cognitive development essentially happening within the human mind, to viewing it as driven by people's interactions with the outside material, environmental, and social worlds. In doing so, they bring us a much more coherent and comprehensible history of human cognitive evolution than any I have seen thus far. -- Sander van der Leeuw Ph.D, Arizona State University
This book by Murray Leaf and Dwight Read is both brilliant and revolutionary. It puts socio-cultural anthropology in a context that understands human social behavior as cognitively “governed,” i.e., not generated by ideas but rather made interpretable, and therefore interactive, by mental rules. These “rules” of conceptual government finally allow serious algebraic-mathematical analysis of social-cultural behavior and idea systems as formal science properly grounded in relevant technical philosophy in a genuine evolutionary framework. -- F. K. Lehman, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Murray Leaf and Dwight Read propose a new theoretical outlook for anthropology – even ‘a new science’, as announced in the introduction. Human thought and Social Organization touches upon an ambitious range of topics, from cognition in the Upper Palaeolithic to kinship algebra and communication theory. Its wide array of subjects is also likely to appeal to scholars working in cultural evolution or cognitive anthropology, and especially to those embracing a formal-mathematical approach to social phenomena. * Journal Of The Royal Anthropological Institute *

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments Orthography and Notation List of Figures and Tables Preface 1. Introduction 2. Assumptions 3. The Organizational Rubicon of the Upper Paleolithic 4. Fundamentals of Human Social Organization 5. Elicitation of Kinship Terminology Structure 6. Theory of Kinship Terminology Structures 7. Construction of a Kinship Algebra Model 8. Kin Terminology and Social Structure: The Kariera Case 9. Formal Algebraic Construction of the Kariera Terminology 10. The Physical Farm Budget: a Social Charter 11. Idea-Systems and Communication Theory 12. Conclusion References Index About the Authors

Human Thought and Social Organization

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    A Paperback by Murray J. Leaf, Dwight Read

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      View other formats and editions of Human Thought and Social Organization by Murray J. Leaf

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 6/12/2014 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780739197974, 978-0739197974
      ISBN10: 0739197975

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Human beings have two outstanding characteristics compared to all other species: the apparently enormous elaboration of our thought through language and symbolism and the elaboration of our forms of social organization. The view taken in Human Thought and Social Organization: Anthropology on a New Plane is that these are intimately interconnected. To understand this connection, the book compares the structure of the systems of thought that organizations are built upon with the organizational basis of human thinking as such. An experimental method is used, leading to a new science of the structure of human social organizations in two senses. First, it gives rise to a new kind of ethnology that has the combination of empirical solidity and formal analytical rigor associated with the paradigmatic sciences. Second, it makes evident that social organizations have distinctive properties and require distinctive explanations of a sort that cannot be reduced to the explanations drawn from, or grounded in, these other sciences.Human social organizations are created by people using systems of ideas with very specific logical properties. This book describes what these idea-systems are with an unbroken chain of analysis that begins with field elicitation, and continues by working out their most fundamental, logico-mathematical generative elements. This enables us to see precisely how these idea systems are used to generate organizations that give pattern to ongoing behavior. The book shows how organizations are objectified by community members through symbolic representations that provide them with shared conceptions of organizations, roles, or relations that they see each other as participating in. The case for this constructive process being pan-Homo sapiens is described, spanning all human communities from the Upper Paleolithic to today, and from the most seemingly primitive Australian tribes to modern-day America and India. While focusing primarily on kinship, Human Thought and Social Organization shows how the analysis applies with equal precision to other social areas ranging from farming to political factionalism.

      Trade Review
      Continuing their collaboration, in this book Leaf and Read provide the view of kinship organization’s underlying cognitive processes and then lay out their formal analysis of kinship terminologies that should transform the field into a bona fide science equivalent to theoretical physics. It is a volume of formidable scope and clarity of exposition....This book has potentially a very wide readership and should...be on the list of cultural anthropologists, evolutionary ecologists, archaeologists, linguists, psychologists, and applied anthropologists. * Anthropos *
      … Read and Leaf, in this highly stimulating book, present a novel, coherent theory about the co-evolution of human thought and language on the one hand, and human social organization on the other. They do so by shifting the perspective from cognitive development essentially happening within the human mind, to viewing it as driven by people's interactions with the outside material, environmental, and social worlds. In doing so, they bring us a much more coherent and comprehensible history of human cognitive evolution than any I have seen thus far. -- Sander van der Leeuw Ph.D, Arizona State University
      This book by Murray Leaf and Dwight Read is both brilliant and revolutionary. It puts socio-cultural anthropology in a context that understands human social behavior as cognitively “governed,” i.e., not generated by ideas but rather made interpretable, and therefore interactive, by mental rules. These “rules” of conceptual government finally allow serious algebraic-mathematical analysis of social-cultural behavior and idea systems as formal science properly grounded in relevant technical philosophy in a genuine evolutionary framework. -- F. K. Lehman, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
      Murray Leaf and Dwight Read propose a new theoretical outlook for anthropology – even ‘a new science’, as announced in the introduction. Human thought and Social Organization touches upon an ambitious range of topics, from cognition in the Upper Palaeolithic to kinship algebra and communication theory. Its wide array of subjects is also likely to appeal to scholars working in cultural evolution or cognitive anthropology, and especially to those embracing a formal-mathematical approach to social phenomena. * Journal Of The Royal Anthropological Institute *

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments Orthography and Notation List of Figures and Tables Preface 1. Introduction 2. Assumptions 3. The Organizational Rubicon of the Upper Paleolithic 4. Fundamentals of Human Social Organization 5. Elicitation of Kinship Terminology Structure 6. Theory of Kinship Terminology Structures 7. Construction of a Kinship Algebra Model 8. Kin Terminology and Social Structure: The Kariera Case 9. Formal Algebraic Construction of the Kariera Terminology 10. The Physical Farm Budget: a Social Charter 11. Idea-Systems and Communication Theory 12. Conclusion References Index About the Authors

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