Description
Sentient Conceptualisations
Feeling for Time in the Sciences of the Past
Author: Simonetti Cristian
Language: EnglishSubjects for Sentient Conceptualisations:
Keywords
De La Beche; Vertical Chronologies; Stratigraphic Understanding; Agentive Happening; Vertical Understanding; Chronological Thinking; Current Geological Epoch; Trowel’s Edge; Pompeii Premise; Gravitational Environments; Sentient Conceptualisations; Absent Properties; Temporal Trajectories; Archaeological Practice; Time Depth; Amerindian Perspectivism; HMS Challenger; Soil Scientists; Time’s Cycle; William Hunt; UK Archaeologist; Global Boundary Stratotype Section; Munsell Chart; Time Reference Point; Material Transactions
Publication date: 08-2020
· 15.6x23.4 cm · Paperback
Publication date: 08-2017
· 15.6x23.4 cm · Hardback
Description
/li>Contents
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/li>Biography
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Sentient Conceptualisations is about how scientists studying the past understand time in relation to space. Simonetti argues that the feelings for depths and surfaces, arising from the bodily movements and gestures of scientific practice, strongly influence conceptualisations of space and time. With an anthropological eye, Simonetti explores the ways archaeologists and those from related disciplines develop expert knowledge in varied environments. The book draws on ethnographic work carried out with Chilean and Scottish archaeologists, working both on land and underwater, to analyse in depth the visual language of science and what it reveals about the relation between thinking and feeling.
Introduction
1. Gesturing a Past Underground
2. Forward into the Absent Past
3. Vertical and Horizontal Chronologies in Tension
4. The Stratification of Life, Mind and Sociality
5. Time at the Trowel’s Edge
6. Bodies of Knowledge: Anthropology, Archaeology and History
7. Time Play: From Ontology to Rheology
Cristián Simonetti is Assistant Professor at the Programa de Antropología, Instituto de Sociología, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile and an Honorary Research Fellow at the Department of Anthropology, University of Aberdeen, UK.