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8 - Cognition and the cultural relations of prehension

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 January 2010

Roy Ellen
Affiliation:
University of Kent, Canterbury
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Summary

Man and life and nature are none of them domains that present themselves to the curiosity of knowledge spontaneously and passively

[Foucault, 1970: 72]

Introduction

Over more than a decade analyses of the various connections between cognition and collective representations, mind and culture, and between ‘mundane’ and ‘symbolic’ classifications, have all received a certain degree of prominence in the professional anthropological literature. In contrast to some writers [e.g. Bloch, 1977; Bloch, 1985], my own view is that the interrelationships between these apparent opposites, as evident in particular substantive cases, are often far from clear [Ellen, 1979a; c.f. Harris and Heelas, 1979]. In large part, the present book is an attempt to vindicate this view in relation to a specific body of data. Having said as much, it is clear that some confusion has arisen from a failure to distinguish clearly instruments (means or agents) of cognitive process from the medium of belief and cultural representation. A generation of anthropologists, most distinguished of which are perhaps Claude Lévi-Strauss, Edmund Leach and Mary Douglas, have tended to conflate cognition with collective representations, but as Bloch [Bloch, 1985: 30] has insisted, we cannot treat cognition as some arbitrarily-imposed scheme. The kinds of cognitive process which I have outlined are apparent in the social construction of categories across the complete range of human experience, ‘mundane’ no less than ‘symbolic’.

Type
Chapter
Information
The Cultural Relations of Classification
An Analysis of Nuaulu Animal Categories from Central Seram
, pp. 215 - 234
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1993

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