What Is Anthropology?
Anthropology, the study of humankind everywhere throughout time, produces knowledge about what makes people different from one another and what we all have in common. Anthropologists work within four fields of the discipline. While physical anthropologists focus on humans as biological organisms (tracing evolutionary development and looking at biological variations), cultural anthropologists investigate the contrasting ways groups of humans think, feel, and behave. Archaeologists try to recover information about human cultures—usually from the past—by studying material objects, skeletal remains, and settlements. Meanwhile, linguists study languages— communication systems by which cultures are maintained and passed on to succeeding generations. Practitioners in all four fields are informed by one another’s findings and united by a common anthropological perspective on the human condition.
How Does Anthropology Compare to Other Disciplines?
In studying humankind, early anthropologists came to the conclusion that to fully understand the complexities of human thought, feelings, behavior, and biology, it was necessary to study and compare all humans, wherever and whenever. More than any other feature, this comparative, cross-cultural, long-term perspective distinguishes anthropology from other social sciences. Anthropologists are not the only scholars who study people, but they are uniquely holistic in their approach, focusing on the interconnections and interdependence of all aspects of the human experience, past and present. This holistic and integrative outlook equips anthropologists to grapple with an issue of overriding importance for all of us today: globalization.
How Do Anthropologists Do What They Do?
Anthropologists, like other scholars, are concerned with the description and explanation of reality. They formulate and test hypotheses—tentative explanations of observed phenomena— concerning humankind. Their aim is to develop reliable theories—interpretations or explanations supported by bodies of data—about our species. These data are usually collected through fieldwork—a particular kind of hands-on research that gives anthropologists enough familiarity with a situation that they can begin to recognize patterns, regularities, and exceptions. It is also through careful observation, combined with comparison, that anthropologists test their theories.
For as long as we have been on earth, people have sought to understand who we are, where we come from, and why we act as we do. Throughout most of human history, though, people relied on myth and folklore for answers, rather than on the systematic testing of data obtained through careful observation. Anthropology, over the last 150 years, has emerged as a tradition of scientific inquiry with its own approaches to answering these questions. Simply stated, anthropology is the study of humankind in all times and places. While focusing primarily on Homo sapiens—the human species—anthropologists also study our ancestors and close animal relatives for clues about what it means to be human.