£45.97

Springer Applying Evolutionary Archaeology: A Systematic Approach

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£46 today · usual range £43–£47 · best ever £43

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Last 91 days • 91 data points

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£46.64 £43.08 £43.85 £44.63 £45.41 £46.19 £46.96 07 April 2026 29 April 2026 22 May 2026 13 June 2026 06 July 2026

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Price distribution over 91 days • 5 price levels

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26 days 15 days 40 days 1 day · current 9 days 0 10 20 30 40 £43 £44 £45 £46 £47 Days at Price

Price Analysis

Most common price: £45 (40 days, 44.0%)

Price range: £43 - £47

Price levels: 5 different prices over 91 days

Description

Anthropology, and by extension archaeology, has had a long-standing interest in evolution in one or several of its various guises. Pick up any lengthy treatise on humankind written in the last quarter of the nineteenth century and the chances are good that the word evolution will appear somewhere in the text. If for some reason the word itself is absent, the odds are excellent that at least the concept of change over time will have a central role in the discussion. After one of the preeminent (and often vilified) social scientists of the nineteenth century, Herbert Spencer, popularized the term in the 1850s, evolution became more or less a household word, usually being used synonymously with change, albeit change over extended periods of time. Later, through the writings of Edward Burnett Tylor, Lewis Henry Morgan, and others, the notion of evolution as it applies to stages of social and political development assumed a prominent position in anthropological disc- sions. To those with only a passing knowledge of American anthropology, it often appears that evolutionism in the early twentieth century went into a decline at the hands of Franz Boas and those of similar outlook, often termed particularists. However, it was not evolutionism that was under attack but rather comparativism― an approach that used the ethnographic present as a key to understanding how and why past peoples lived the way they did (Boas 1896).

Product Specifications

Format
paperback
Domain
Amazon UK
Release Date
31 March 2000
Listed Since
07 February 2007

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