Abstract:
This collection provides interdisciplinary discussions of the impact of the heritage of modernity in archaeology and related disciplines from a theoretical, philosophical point of view. The ways the philosophical and scientific heritage of modernity shapes current human scientific thought is a much-discussed topic in archaeology, anthropology, and beyond. From central themes of modernity, such as reductionism, materialism, and physicalism, there is a connection to central archaeological and other concerns with the relationship of nature to culture – the biological, cognitive, and physiological, on the one hand, and the social, political, and epistemological on the other.
As a political and economic form, modernity also has fundamentally shaped modern archaeological and related scientific practices of “fast” and “slow” science. Modernity, however, was and is also in part a reflective, humanist project constantly reassessing itself and its own intellectual foundations, commitments, presuppositions, and biases. In this sense, any critiques of modernity arguably draw from this aspect of the heritage of modernity itself. All these issues pertain to fundamental methodological and conceptual questions about our understanding of the human past, present, and future discussed in this collection.
The book is a product of an international workshop held at Kiel University, Germany, on the topic of philosophy of archaeology. It will be of interest to theoretically minded readers in archaeology, anthropology, philosophy, social theory, and beyond.
Contents
Foreword of the Series Editors
Preface of the Book Editors
Opening Words
V. P. J. Arponen, Artur Ribeiro, Konrad Ott
Towards Difference
Rachel Crellin
Archaeology and Metamodernity
Caroline Heitz
Analogical Reasoning and the New Materialism: Reactions to Discourses on Modernity
Jerimy J. Cunningham
Escaping Modernity with Modernity: Some Reactions to Reactions
V. P. J. Arponen
Origins of the Anthropocene in the Neolithic: A Contribution to an Understanding of the Deep Roots of the Modern Condition
Konrad Ott
Dr.
V. P. J. Arponen
V. P. J. Arponen PhD is a Junior Research Group Leader in the Reflective Turn Forum of the ROOTS Cluster of Excellence at Kiel University, Germany (EXC 2150 ROOTS – 390870439). His academic research focuses on various topics in the philosophy of archaeology and anthropology.
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Prof. Dr.
Konrad Ott
Konrad Ott is a full professor for environmental philosophy and ethics at Kiel University. He wrote a PhD thesis on the origins and the discursive logic of scientific history. His current fields of research are environmental ethics, climate ethics, sustainability, nature conservation, discourse theory, and philosophy of history. Konrad Ott is a PI of the Reflective Turn Forum of the ROOTS Cluster of Excellence.
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Dr.
Arthur Ribeiro
Arthur Ribeiro is a postdoctoral researcher in the Collaborative Research Cluster 1266 “Scales of Transformation – Human-Environmental Interaction in Prehistoric and Archaic Societies” (SFB 1266, Project number 290391021). His academic research focuses on topics in archaeological theory, philosophy, and European archaeology.
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