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diffusionist การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • From the early 20th century, this " invasionist " scenario was juxtaposed to a diffusionist view.
  • Pointing to poorly demonstrated trans-oceanic contacts is an example of a hyper-diffusionist theory.
  • Mathews corresponded with W . H . R . Rivers, who became a major proponent of diffusionist theories.
  • Discussions of diffusionist theories seeking the origin of their culture in Old World civilizations rather than from indigenous factors.
  • They say I am a fringe writer and " diffusionist " ( whatever that may be, nothing good ).
  • Indeed, diffusionist explanations are still valid in many cases and the importance of describing and classifying finds has not gone away.
  • The theory of the " Neolithic revolution " implies a diffusionist interpretation of the spread of innovations such as agriculture and pottery.
  • Reviewers have found his proposals for the original settlement and dispersal worthy of further study, but have been sceptical of his more diffusionist claims.
  • His diffusionist theories were eventually displaced by more complex views of cultural interaction but following refinement his system of sub-divisions is still effectively in use.
  • Wisberg was also a radio and television dramatist in the United States, Australia, and England; a radio diffusionist in Paris; and a journalist.
  • She was essentially a diffusionist, inspired by several intellectual schools of thought and in some respects emulating the techniques used by W . H . R . Rivers.
  • Born in Cambridge City near Hagerstown, Indiana, Wissler graduated from culture area and age-area ideology of the diffusionist viewpoint that is no longer popular in anthropology.
  • Because of his diffusionist outlook, Glick s work is viewed in Spain as geographical and he was awarded the Premio Internacional Geocrit韈a in 2004, for lifetime achievement in geography
  • Regardless of the " invasionist " vs . " diffusionist " debate, it is beyond dispute that exchanges with the continent were a defining aspect of the British Iron Age.
  • Among them : Basin-Plateau Aboriginal Sociopolitical Groups ( 1938 ), which  fully explicated the paradigm of cultural ecology, and marked a shift away from the diffusionist orientation of American anthropology.
  • MacKie's theory has fallen from favour too, mainly because starting in the 1970s there was a general move in archaeology away from'diffusionist'explanations towards those pointing to exclusively indigenous development.
  • His two-volume " History of Melanesian Society " ( 1914 ), which he dedicated to St Johns, presented a diffusionist thesis for the development of culture in the south-west Pacific.
  • Heyerdahl was an ardent exponent of the " diffusionist " school of cultural anthropology, which holds that cultural similarities between geographically separated societies are not necessarily spontaneous coincidence but are sometimes the result of actual contacts in antiquity.
  • Contrary to the diffusionist theory, it appears that there was simultaneously a structural evolution towards the pointed arch, for the purpose of vaulting spaces of irregular plan, or to bring transverse vaults to the same height as diagonal vaults.
  • The membership of NEARA consists for the most part of amateurs, and the organization was in 2003 described as a'hotbed of " Diffusionist " thought, the belief that the Americas were widely visited by European and Asiatic cultures before Columbus '.
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