This special issue features the works of leading scholars who promote bold, innovative approaches to understanding the nature and social constitution of human knowing. The ethnography, theory and methods presented expose possibilities for interdisciplinary collaboration and lay solid foundations for further investigations into embodied cognition and conceptual thinking. Knowledge is explored both in its various modes of articulation (i.e. motor, sensory and propositional) and in its range of social, cultural and material manifestations. Determinately, knowledge and practice are not fixed; nor are they hostage to unconscious reproduction. Rather what the essays demonstrate is that human knowledge, like physical bodies, is constantly reconfig...
The alternative conception of knowledge we take up here, a practice-based view, is advocated by a gr...
What is the nature of knowledge? Anthropology imagines it possible to divide or separate social and ...
Recent projects to reclaim social anthropology for the study of human origins have little to say abo...
Interaction is the mode of life of living organisms. Each must feed on its environment, ingesting ch...
With a view to better understanding and explaining the transformations under way in the knowledge so...
Introduction to the special issue of Qualitative Sociology, "Knowledge in Practice" - In the past 10...
Whereas previous Sidney Mintz lectures have celebrated Mintz’swork on inequality, racism, and ethnic...
Introduction to the special issue of Qualitative Sociology, "Knowledge in Practice
International audienceThe study of ways of knowing is a major topic in psychology and cognitive scie...
Although the central concern of the work which follows is the nature of knowledge, I became during m...
The brain produces the mind through cultivation. Thus, the structure of the mind is not a priori, bu...
The concepts like knowledge and interaction have acquired many different meanings in human and socia...
This bibliographic essay is based on the book that resulted from a series of discussions promoted by...
Using historical-philosophical and historical-cultural material, the authors substantiate the idea t...
This book is a scriptural sculpture of how the physical dimensions of the earth - built and natural ...
The alternative conception of knowledge we take up here, a practice-based view, is advocated by a gr...
What is the nature of knowledge? Anthropology imagines it possible to divide or separate social and ...
Recent projects to reclaim social anthropology for the study of human origins have little to say abo...
Interaction is the mode of life of living organisms. Each must feed on its environment, ingesting ch...
With a view to better understanding and explaining the transformations under way in the knowledge so...
Introduction to the special issue of Qualitative Sociology, "Knowledge in Practice" - In the past 10...
Whereas previous Sidney Mintz lectures have celebrated Mintz’swork on inequality, racism, and ethnic...
Introduction to the special issue of Qualitative Sociology, "Knowledge in Practice
International audienceThe study of ways of knowing is a major topic in psychology and cognitive scie...
Although the central concern of the work which follows is the nature of knowledge, I became during m...
The brain produces the mind through cultivation. Thus, the structure of the mind is not a priori, bu...
The concepts like knowledge and interaction have acquired many different meanings in human and socia...
This bibliographic essay is based on the book that resulted from a series of discussions promoted by...
Using historical-philosophical and historical-cultural material, the authors substantiate the idea t...
This book is a scriptural sculpture of how the physical dimensions of the earth - built and natural ...
The alternative conception of knowledge we take up here, a practice-based view, is advocated by a gr...
What is the nature of knowledge? Anthropology imagines it possible to divide or separate social and ...
Recent projects to reclaim social anthropology for the study of human origins have little to say abo...