You might be interested in:
http://lcweb2.loc.gov/ammem/today/today.html [Today in History]
http://www.tamu.edu/anthropology/news.html [Anthropology In The News} From Texas A&M University]
http://news.google.com/ [GOOGLE} News Information from all over!]
http://www.fourmilab.ch/cgi-bin/uncgi/Earth/action?opt=-p [Earth View!]
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ANTHROPOLOGY 13-01 FALL 2003 |
Dr. Charles F. Urbanowicz / Professor of Anthropology |
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Guidebook for Human Cultural Diversity [TRACS #10166] |
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ANTH 13-01} MWF} Ayres Hall 106} 9 ->9:50am |
Office Hours} Mon + Wed} 8 -> 8:30 + 2
-> 4pm and by appointment; Office Phone:
(530) 898-6220 / Dept: (530) 898-6192; |
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e-mail: curbanowicz@csuchico.edu |
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© [Copyright: All Rights Reserved] Charles F. Urbanowicz/August 25, 2003} This copyrighted Web Guidebook, printed from http://www.csuchico.edu/~curban/syllabi/SYL_13-FA2003.html, is intended for use by students enrolled at California State University, Chico, in the Fall Semester of 2003 and unauthorized use / reproduction in any manner is definitely prohibited. |
DESCRIPTION: The course explores culture as the basis for understanding the human experience, including an examination of cross-cultural diversity. This is an approved General Education course. This is an approved Non-Western course. (The 2003-2005 University Catalog, page 192.)
THREE REQUIRED TEXTS:
Spradley & McCurdy, 2002, Conformity And Conflict:
Readings in Cultural Anthropology (11th Edition)
George R. Stewart, 1949, Earth Abides.
Charles F. Urbanowicz, Fall 2003 edition, Anthropology 13
Guidebook [also available at http://www.csuchico.edu/~curban/syllabi/SYL_13-FA2003.html].
THREE RECOMMENDED ITEMS:
Any English Language Dictionary.
William A. Strunk, Jr., 2000, The Elements of Style (4th
edition).
The World Almanac and Book of Facts 2003.
BOOK-IN COMMON (for 2003-2004):
Jacob Needleman, 2002, The American Soul: Rediscovering the
Wisdom of the Founders (NY: Jeremy P. Tarcher/Putnam).
ASSESSMENT: Make-up exams are only allowed IF there has been a documented emergency: likewise, your Writing Assignment is DUE on October 17, 2003 and will ONLY be accepted late IF there has been a documented and extreme emergency: NOTE} failure of your computer to print out the Writing Assignment that morning is not, REPEAT, is not an emergency! In an emergency, please contact Urbanowicz as soon as possible b.e.f.o.r.e. or after the emergency! Please note the following dates (and look at dates & requirements for your other courses):
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THE COURSE is heavily mediated and you are responsible for certain information presented in this manner. Individuals are expected to locate major land masses discussed in lectures, readings, visuals, etc. Each examination has a map component based on the maps in one of the required texts: Anthropology 13 Guidebook. You are also responsible for selected information distributed in any additional handouts that might be distributed for the course. Your Writing Assignment should be approximately 1200 words. The single Writing Assignment must be typed and/or word-processed and double-spaced. PLEASE NOTE: Various WWW addresses are provided and they will be expanded upon throughout the semester, but at this time no examination questions will be based on these WWW locations: they are shared with you for exploration on your own. ALSO NOTE: At various times throughout the semester, this web Guidebook will be updated and you may be responsible for some of the information provided to you in these updates. [The above paragraph contains ~158 words.]
NOTE: If you have a documented disability that may require reasonable accommodations, please contact Disability Support Services (DSS) for coordination of your academic accommodations. DSS is located in Building E. Building E is adjacent to Meriam Library and Bell Memorial Union (BMU). The DSS phone number is 898-5959 V/TTY or FAX 898-4411. Visit the DSS website at http://www.csuchico.edu/dss/.
PLEASE REMEMBER: The ANTHROPOLOGY FORUM (ANTH 297-01} #10186) for One Unit every Thursday from 4 -> 4:50pm in Ayres Hall 120. Information on previous Anthropology Forum presentations by Urbanowicz may be viewed at: http://www.csuchico.edu/~curban/30YearsOfAnthroForums.html [The Anthropology Forum: 1973 -> 2003!].
The Functions of Grading: Underlying the rationale for grades is the theme of communication. Grades communicate one or more of the following functions:
1. To recognize that classroom instructors have the right and responsibility to provide careful evaluation of student performance and the responsibility for timely assignment of appropriate grades;
2. To recognize performance in a particular course;
3. To act as a basis of screening for other courses or programs (including graduate school);
4. To inform you of your level of achievement in a specific course; To stimulate you to learn;
5. To inform prospective employers and others of your achievement.
DEFINITION OF LETTER GRADING SYMBOLS:
A -- Superior Work: A level of achievement so outstanding that it is normally attained by relatively few students.
B -- Very Good Work: A high level of achievement clearly better than adequate competence in the subject matter/skill, but not as good as the unusual, superior achievement of students earning an A.
C -- Adequate Work: A level of achievement indicating adequate competence in the subject matter/skill. This level will usually be met by a majority of students in the class.
D -- Minimally Acceptable Work: A level of achievement which meets the minimum requirements of the course.
F -- Unacceptable Work: A level of achievement that fails to meet the minimum requirements of the course. Not passing.
ON PLAGIARISM / MISREPRESENTATION:
Plagiarism, in the 2003-2005 University Catalogue (page 47), is defined as follows: "Copying homework answers from your text to hand in for a grade; failing to give credit for ideas, statement of facts, or conclusions derived from another source; submitting a paper downloaded from the Internet or submitting a friend's paper as your own; claiming credit for artistic work (such as a music composition, photo, painting, drawing, sculpture, or design) done by someone else." FROM http://www.csuchico.edu/art/contrapposto/contrapposto00/pages/appendix8.html please note the following: "B. Plagiarism will lead to grade reduction [for] the course and could lead to suspension from the University. (You are responsible to the standards appearing in the University's catalogue and the student handbook. Please read the University's pamphlet, Academic Honesty, an Ounce of Prevention.) Copies of this handbook are available at the Student Judicial Affairs Office in Kendall Hall [stress added]." (And see here below.)
ALSO, please note the following from the 2003-2005 University Catalogue (page 47) on Misrepresentation: "Having another student take your exam, or do your computer program or lab experiment; lying to an instructor to increase your grade; submitting a paper that is substantially the same for credit in two different courses without prior approval of both instructors involved; altering a graded work after it has been returned and then submitting the work for regrading [stress added]."
SPECIAL: The Department of Anthropology: A High Quality Learning Environment.SPECIAL: Fall 2003 Certain Statements
1. WEEK 1: Beginning Monday, August 25, 2003: INTRODUCTION & OVERVIEW TO THE COURSE.
SPECIAL: Paying For College.
2. WEEK 2: Beginning Wednesday, September 3, 2003: WHAT DOES AN ANTHROPOLOGIST DO FOR A LIVING?
3. WEEK 3: Beginning Monday, September 8, 2003: CULTURE & ETHNOGRAPHY (CONTINUED)
SPECIAL: Notes on California / ChicoSPECIAL: Notes on Charles Darwin (1809-1882)
SPECIAL: Fall 2003 "Current Events"
4. WEEK 4: Beginning Monday, September 15, 2003: RESEARCH, ECOLOGY, & INTO LANGUAGE
SPECIAL: Anthropology & Cyberspace
5. WEEK 5: Beginning Monday, September 22, 2003: LANGUAGE, COMMUNICATION, & REVIEW, and EXAM I (20%) on Friday September 26, 2003.
6. WEEK 6: Beginning Monday, September 29, 2003: ECOLOGY & SUBSISTENCE (CONTINUED).
SPECIAL: The Nacirema.
7. WEEK 7: Beginning Monday, October 6, 2003: ECONOMICS & KINSHIP & FAMILY & MAGIC & RELIGION.
SPECIAL: Writing Assignment Instructions For Writing Assignment (20%) DUE Friday October 17, 2003.SPECIAL: The University Writing Center.
SPECIAL: Anthropology Journals at California State University, Chico.
8. WEEK 8: Beginning Monday, October 13, 2003: ROLES & INEQUALITY & ECONOMICS & CHANGE & YOUR WRITING ASSIGNMENT (20%) DUE Friday October 17, 2003.
9. WEEK 9: Beginning Monday, October 20, 2003: WEEK #8 TOPICS CONTINUED & CULTURE CHANGE.
10. WEEK 10: Beginning Monday, October 27, 2003: CULTURE CHANGE, APPLIED ANTHROPOLOGY, AND TECHNOLOGY.
11. WEEK 11: Beginning Monday November 3, 2003: CULTURE CHANGE CONTINUED AND REVIEW AND EXAM II (25%) on Friday November 7, 2003.
12. WEEK 12: Beginning Monday November 10, 2003: LAW & POLITICS & RELIGION, MAGIC, AND WORLD VIEW
SPECIAL: Previous Student Comments About Earth Abides.
13. WEEK 13: Beginning Monday, November 17, 2003: BACK TO THE PACIFIC: TASMANIA.
14. WEEK 14: THANKSGIVING BREAK} November 24, 2003 -> November 28, 2003!
15. WEEK 15: Beginning Monday, December 1, 2003: ALMOST OVER & WINDING DOWN.
SPECIAL: Notes on Native Americans
16. WEEK 16: Beginning Monday, December 8, 2003, 2003: CULTURAL DIVERSITY AND REVIEW.
17. WEEK 17: EXAM III (30%): ANTH 13-01} AYRES 106} On MONDAY December 15, 2003 from 10 -> 11:50am.
A Short Course In Human Relations
SPECIAL: Selected University Resources For Students
SPECIAL: Brief Disclaimer Essay On This Web-Based Syllabus
SIX ESSAYS BY URBANOWICZ FOR FALL 2003
1. An understanding of the phenomenon of culture as that which differentiates human life from other life forms; an understanding of the roles of human biology and cultural processes in human behavior and human evolution.
2. A positive appreciation of the diversity of contemporary and past human cultures and an awareness of the value of anthropological perspectives and knowledge in contemporary society.
3. A knowledge of the substantive data pertinent to the several sub disciplines of anthropology and familiarity with major issues relevant to each.
4. Familiarity with the forms of anthropological literature and basic data sources and knowledge of how to access such information.
5. Knowledge of the methodology appropriate to the sub-disciplines of anthropology and the capacity to apply appropriate methods when conducting anthropological research.
6. The ability to present and communicate in anthropologically appropriate ways anthropological knowledge and the results of anthropological research.
7. Knowledge of the history of anthropological thought.
"Supported by an extraordinarily dedicated faculty and professional staff, the Department of Anthropology maintains a number of programs, initiatives and professional activities that contribute to a high quality learning environment for undergraduate and graduate students. based on the principles of learning by doing and the value of extended and intensive faculty-student contact, the program provides educational and training opportunities in all of the disciplines sub-fields: archeology, physical and cultural anthropology, linguistics and museum studies. Student learning is enhanced through facilities such as the Physical Anthropology Human Identification Laboratory, the Archaeological Research Program, the Ethnographic Lab and the Museum of Anthropology. Anthropology also makes significant contributions to General Education. The result is a rigorous, challenging and intellectually exciting program of academic and experiential learning. The success of this program can be measured in competitions and in launching successful careers in heritage resource management, forensic investigation, local regional and national museums and allied professional fields." President Manuel A. Esteban, California State University, Chico, May 13, 2003 Memorandum to all Faculty and Staff.
"I say my philosophy, not as claiming authorship of ideas which are widely diffused in modern thought, but because the ultimate selection and synthesis must be a personal responsibility." Sir Arthur Eddington [1882-1944], The Philosophy of Physical Science, 1949: page viii.
"Anything we haven't experienced for ourselves sounds like a story. All we can do is sift the evidence."Mary Norton, 1953, The Borrowers Afield."
"Any teacher who can be replaced by a computer deserves to be!" David Smith; as cited by Mike Cooley, 1999, Human-Centered Design. In Information Design (1999), edited by Robert Jacobson (MIT Press), pages 59-81, page 73.
"Every single thing we do or say, even our inactions, changes the world. We do make a difference. The kind of difference we make is up to us." Julia "Butterfly" Hill, at CSU, Chico, May 2, 2000; in Inside Chico, May 11, 2000, page 3.
"...I do believe something very magical can happen when you read a good book" [stress added]." Joanne K. Rowling, 1999, Harry Potter Author Reveals The Secret.... In USA Weekend, November 12-14, 1999, page 4.
"How you think about who you are right now has everything to do with what will happen to you in the future." (C.C. Carter, Chico Enterprise-Record, May 6, 1997, page 12A).
"The unit of survival [or adaptation] is organism plus environment. We are learning by bitter experience that the organism which destroys its environment destroys itself." Gregory Bateson, Steps to an Ecology of Mind, 1972: 483.
"Interest is a sense of being involved in some process, actual or potential. ...Interest is not the same as attention. Attention is a simple response to a stimulus--either to a loud bang or (much more powerful) to a feeling of interest. Interest is selective, an expenditure of energy by the interested party. ... Memory is an internally edited record of interests (not of attention, much less of 'events') [stress added]." Henry Hay, 1972, The Amateur Magician's Handbook, pp. 2-3.
"The cutting edge of knowledge is not in the known but in the unknown, not in knowing but in questioning. Facts, concepts, generalizations, and theories are dull instruments unless they are honed to a sharp edge by persistent inquiry about the unknown." Ralph H. Thompson [1911-1987] American Educator.
"We were getting close to the answer and I was beginning to fly. I could feel my brain cells doing a little tap dance of delight. I was half-skipping, excitement bubbling out of me as we crossed the street. 'I love information. I love information. Isn't this great? God, it's fun...'" The character Kinsey Milhone, in Sue Grafton, 1990, "G" Is For Gumshoe, page 277.
"It is our choices that show what we truly are, far more than our abilities." The character Albus Dumbledore to Harry Potter in Harry Potter And the Chamber of Secrets, 1998, by Joanne K. Rowling, page 333.
"Education is experience, and the essence of experience is self-reliance." E.B. White [1899-1985], 1939, The Once And Future King (1967 G.P. Putnam edition), page 46.
"The university is not engaged in making ideas safe for students. It is engaged in making students safe for ideas [stress added]." Clark Kerr, in Vance Packard, 1964, The Naked Society [1965 Cardinal paperback edition], page 99.
"Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter." Martin Luther King, Jr. (1929-1968); awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1964.
"Cultural diversity is a reservoir of creativity.... This creativity is not confined to the arts; it is also a source of potential solutions to social and environmental problems, solutions that would otherwise be ignored by politically dominant cultures precisely because dominance breeds complacency and stunts the capacity of self-criticism. In this sense, cultural diversity is an indispensable corrective or counter-balance [stress added]." David Harmon, 2002, In Light of Our Differences: How Diversity In Nature And Culture Makes Us Human (Smithsonian Institution Press), page 45.
"Amaze me with your stories. Thrill me with your experiences. Astound me with your brilliance. Convince me with your passion. Show excitement. Intrigue. Anything--just don't bore me with another computer graphics presentation [stress added]." Clifford Stoll, 1999, High-Tech Heretic: Why Computers Don't Belong in the Classroom and Other Reflections by a Computer Contrarian (NY: Doubleday), page 183.
"The most important word in the English language is attitude. Love and hate, work and play, hope and fear, our attitudinal response to all these situations, impresses me as being the guide." Harlen Adams (1904-1997)
I. INTRODUCTION AND OVERVIEW TO THE COURSE: COURSE ORGANIZATION & PLANNING.
An understanding of the phenomenon of culture as that which differentiates human life from other life forms; an understanding of the roles of human biology and cultural processes in human behavior and human evolution.A positive appreciation of the diversity of contemporary and past human cultures and an awareness of the value of anthropological perspectives and knowledge in contemporary society.
A. PLEASE familiarize yourself with the
format of this Guidebook.
B. PLEASE look at the Department Goals, Reading
Assignments, Outline for each Day, Web Sites/Words/Terms, and Film
Notes: There really are NO surprises in this
course!
C. READ THE FILM NOTES in this Guidebook before the
films are shown in class.
D. YOU WILL BE using this Guidebook throughout the Semester;
you will be reading Spradely & McCurdy (S&M) throughout the
Semester; you will be reading Earth Abides beginning in Week
13 of the Semester. (For previous student comments about Earth
Abides, please click here.)
PLEASE TAKE NOTES IN THIS Guidebook: IT WILL NOT BE
RE-PURCHASED BY THE BOOKSTORE FOR SPRING 2004.
E. A "REPEAT" OF SOME OF THE TRANSPARENCIES USED USED ON DAY 1 OF
CLASS (August 25, 2003) IS AVAILABLE AT: http://www.csuchico.edu/~curban/PowerPoint/ANTH13FA2003
F. ALSO, please think about the following for this class (and
ALL of your classes):
"Your instructor, however knowledgeable and good at communicating, cannot talk about everything at once. He or she cannot tell you at the same time about specific ethnographic cases and different kinds of societies, or about epistemological assumptions about how we learn things at the same time as about ethnographic field work methods, or about heuristic theories at the same time as about specific understandings of particular cultural patterns. He or she cannot tell you about Darwin [1809-1882] and Mendel's [1822-1884] contribution to evolution at the same time he or she is discussing the details of Australopithecus robustus, much less the ecological context and why we think the population that this fossil represents adapted to life on the savanna. You eventually need to know all of these things and how they influence one another, but you cannot learn all of it at once. Be patient; you will catch on [stress added]." Philip Carl Salzman and Patricia C. Rice, 2004, Thinking Anthropologically: A Practical Guide For Students (NJ: Pearson/Prentice-Hall), page 2.
II. READINGS in Spradley & McCurdy, 2002, Conformity And
Conflict, as well as below in this Guidebook.
"Culture and Ethnography" by S&M
[Overview], pages 1-5.
"Ethnography and Culture" by James P. Spradley, pages 7-14.
"Kinship and Family" [Overview], pages 212-215.
"Law and Politics" [Overview] by S&M, pages
300-303.
III. WHAT DOES AN ANTHROPOLOGIST DO?
"Open your discourse with a jest, and let your hearers laugh a little; then become serious." (Talmud: Shabbath. 30b)
A. For a MASSIVE Anthropology site [my term for it], please see: http://www.unipv.it/webbio/dfantrop.htm as well as Anthropology Resources on the Internet and the local: http://www.csuchico.edu/lbib/anthropology/anthropology.html; and http://www.csuchico.edu/lref/guides/rbs/anthro.htm [Anthropology "jumping off" point at CSU, Chico], as well as http://www.sjsu.edu/depts/anthropology/svcp/ [The Silicon Valley Cultures Project].
"A picture shows me at a glance what it takes dozens of pages of a book to expound." (Ivan Sergeyevich Turgenev [1818-1838], Fathers and Sons (1862), Chapter 16.
"Anthropology--From Greek anthropos (man) and logia (study)--is the systematic wonder about and the scientific study of humans. Wonder about humans is probably as old as man [and woman!], Homo sapiens." Morris Freilich, 1983, The Pleasure of Anthropology, page x.
"The English word 'ethnography' derives from Greek and literally means the description of a people and its way of life. In contempoary social science, ethnography refers both to a process of research and to the account (usually in writing, but also possibly on film) that results from that research. The tradition of producing descriptive accounts of the customs and practices of different people goes back to classical antiquity--the histories of the greek Herodotus and the Roman Tacitus are enlivened by such details [stress added]." Michael V. Angrosino, 2002, Doing Cultural Anthropology: Projects for Ethnographic Data Collection (Prospect Heights, Illinois: Waveland press0, page 1.
"The word "anthropology" first appeared in the English language in 1593 (the first of the "ologies," incidentally, to do so). The word "ethnology" made its first appearance in an 1830...." Charles F. Urbanowicz, 1992, Four-Field Commentary. Newsletter of the American Anthropological Association, 1992, Volume 33, Number 9, page 3. [And see: http://www.csuchico.edu/~curban/Pub_Papers/4field.html]
"Lisa, get away from that jazzman! Nothing personal. I just fear the unfamiliar [stress added]." Marge Simpson, February 11, 1990, Moaning Lisa. Matt Groening et al., 1997, The Simpsons: A Complete Guide To Our Favorite Family (NY: HarperCollins), page 22.
"The barbarous heathen are nothing more strange to us than we are to them.... Human reason is a tincture in like weight and measure infused into all our opinions and customs, what form soever they be, infinite in matter, infinite in diversity." (Michel Eyquem de Montaigne [1533-1592], Essays, page 53 [1959 paperback publication of a translation from 1603].
"He had a term for people like this: temporal provincials--people who were ignorant of the past, and proud of it. Temporal provincials were convinced that the present was the only time that mattered, and that anything that had occured earlier could be safely ignored. The modern world was compelling and new, and the past had no bearing on it." Michael Crichton, 1999, Timeline (Ballantine Books November 2000 Paperback), page 84.
C.F. Urbanowicz writes: "All in all, anthropology is fun! I enjoy what I do and in a few words, I honestly believe that teaching should be fun. I will use any 'hard' anthropological data available to get the anthropological message across and any 'soft' fictional data (or ideas) which are also appropriate" [stress added]." Charles F. Urbanowicz, 2000, Mnemonics, Quotations, Cartoons, And A Notebook: "Tricks" For Appreciating Cultural Diversity. Strategies For Teaching Anthropology (Edited by Patricia C. Rice and David W. McCurdy) [NJ: Prentice Hall], pages 132-140, page 137.
B. Please see Create Your Own Newspaper (http://crayon.net/using/links.html)
and if you are interested in "Anthropology In The News" glance at
http://www.tamu.edu/anthropology/news.html.
C. Text(s), Assignments, Examinations (Three), and
Grading
D. How to "use" this Guidebook, Film Notes, and various
WWW "addresses" shared with you. NOTE THE FOLLOWING taken from
Rick Steves' Europe Through the Back Door 1999 (1998, pages
8-9):
"Guidebooks are $15 tools for $3,000 experiences. Many otherwise smart people base the trip of a lifetime on a borrowed copy of a three-year-old guidebook. The money they saved in the bookstore was wasted the first day of their trip, searching for hotels and restaurants long since closed. When I visit someplace as a rank beginner--a place like Belize or Sri Lanka--I equip myself with a good guidebook and expect myself to travel smart. I travel like an old pro, not because I'm a super traveler, but because I have good information and use it. I'm a connoisseur of guidebooks. My trip is my child. I love her. And I give her the best tutors money can buy. Too many people are penny-wise and pound-foolish when it comes to information. ... All you need is a good guidebook covering your destination. Before buying a book, study it. How old is the information? The cheapest books are often the oldest--no bragain. Who wrote it? What's the author's experience? Does the book work for you--or the tourist industry? Does it specialize in hard opinions--or superlatives? For whom is it written? Is it readable? It should have personality without chattiness and information without fluff. Don't believe everything you read. The power of the printed word is scary. Most books are peppered with information that is flat-out wrong. Incredibly enough, even this book may have an error" [stress added]." Rick Steves' Europe Through the Back Door 1999 (Santa Fe, NM: John Muir Publications), 1998, pages 8-9.
E. Desired Outcomes of the Course: for you and for me!
"An estimated one-third of the students who start out in high school in California do not graduate with their peers four years later....California public schools had 437,974 students enrolled in ninth grade in 1995l four years later, 299,221 students graduated - a 68.3 percent graduation rate [stress added]." Deb Kollars, The Sacramento Bee, June 9, 2000, page 1.
PLEASE NOTE THE FOLLOWING from USAToday of May 10, 2002: Kids get 'abysmal' grade in history: High school seniors don't know basics. "On the test: 57% of seniors could not perform even at the basic level. 32% performed at the basic level. 10% performed grade-level work, and 1% were advanced or superior. ... The federally mandated test was administered to 29,000 fourth-, eighth- and 12th-graders at 1,100 public and private schools. Fourth-and eighth-grade students did better than seniors, but not by much. ... [Sample Question]: When the United States entered the Second World War, one of its allies was: A) Germany. B) Japan. C) The Soviet Union. D) Italy. 52% failed to pick the correct answer, C. ... [stress added]." Tamara Henry, USAToday, May 10, 2002, page 1. (And see the web site: http://www.nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard} National Center for Education Statistics.)
PLEASE NOTE THE FOLLOWING from The Chico Enterprise-Record of November 21, 2002: "One in 10 young Americans could not locate his [or her?!] own country on a blank map of the world, a survey of geographic literacy shows. Only 13 percent could find Iraq. ... survey found that about one in seven of Americans between age 18 and 24, the prime age for military service, could place Iraq [stress added]."
PLEASE NOTE THE FOLLOWING from the "Editorial" in The Chico Enterprise-Record of February 3, 2002: "Here are some of the unsettling results of recent polls and studies taken in the United States on geograpy awareness: One in seven U.S. adults could not locate the United States on a world map. Three out of 10 Americans cannot distinguish north from south on a map. Nearly half of the college students in California could not identify Japan on a map. ... Twenty-five percent of high school seniors in Dallas [Texas] couldn't name the country on our southern border. In Baltimore [Maryland], 45 percent of high school seniors couldn't shade in the United States on the world map. ... In Miami [Florida], 30 percent couldn't locate the Pacific Ocean [stress added]."
"The palest ink is better than the best memory." (Chinese proverb) and "The ear is a less trustworthy witness than the eye." (Herodotus [c.485-426 B.C.], The Histories of Herodotus, Book 1, Chapter 8).
"You are the only person whom you will be with for the rest of your life, so you should learn to be at peace with who you are and how valuable you are in God's eyes." James Finn Garner as cited in Rachel Chandler, 1998, The Most Important Lessons In Life: Letters To A Young Girl, page 48.
Please consider the following:
"Nearly 80 percent of seniors at 55 top colleges and universities--including Harvard and Princeton--received a D or F on a 34-question, high-school level American history test that contained historical references....'These students are allowed to graduate as if they didn't know the past existed [stress added].'...." Anon, 2000, American History Quiz Stumps Many College Seniors. San Francisco Chronicle, June 28, 2000, page A3.
IV. CULTURE AND THE CONTEMPORARY WORLD
"Anthropology provides a scientific basis for dealing with the crucial dilemma of the world today: how can peoples of different appearance, mutually unintelligble languages, and dissimilar ways of life get along peaceably together? Of course, no branch of knowledge constitutes a cure-all for all the ills of mankind. ... Students who had not gone beyond the horizon of their own society could not be expected to perceive custom which was the stuff of their own thinking. The scientist of human affairs needs to know as much about the eye that sees as the object seen. Anthropology holds up a great mirror to man[kind] and lets him [and her!] look at himself in his infinite variety. This, and not the satisfaction of idle curiosity nor romantic quest, is the meaning of the anthropologist's work.... [stress in original]." Clyde Kluckhohn, 1949, Mirror For Man: The Relation of Anthropology To Modern Life, page 1 and page 10)
"If there is one thing that anthropologists of the 20th Century have demonstrated it is the position that there is no one single culture which can serve as the sole model of analysis of other cultures. Perhaps the most important point of modern 20th century Anthropology has been the detailed and documented account of the tremendous range of variation of 'cultures of this planet' and this is a distinct move away from various 19th century, and apparently some 20th century views, which offer a monolithic interpretation of CULTURE against which 'lesser' cultures can be appropriately ranked! [stress added]." Charles F. Urbanowicz, 1978, Cultural Implications of Extraterrestrial Contact and the Colonzation of Space. The Industrialization of Space: Advances in the Astronautical Sciences, Edited by Richard A. Van Patten et al., (San Diego, CA: Published for the American Astronautical Society Publication by Univelt, Inc.), pages 785-797, page 793.
A. The Concept of Culture & Basic Cultural Diversity:
ABCs.
B. The Sub-disciplines of Anthropology
"...it seems plain and self-evident, yet it needs to be said: the isolated knowledge obtained by a group of specialists in a narrow field [or an individual researcher] has in itself no value whatsoever, but only in its synthesis with all the rest of knowledge and only inasmuch as it really contributes in this synthesis something toward answering the demand 'who are we?'" 1933 Nobel Laureate in Physics, Erwin Schrödinger (1887-1961)
C. The World Wide Web and the changing aspects of....everything!
http://www.123cam.com/
[Web Cameras Around The World!]
http://www.ilovelanguages.com/
[I Love languages} Your Guide to Languages on the Web]
http://www.bbc.co.uk/education/languages/
[BBC Languages - Homepage]
http://ocw.mit.edu/index.html
[Masachusetts Institute of Technology} OpenCourseWare
Home]
http://www.archaeologychannel.org/content/AudioNews/humexp.html
[The Archaeology Channel]
http://www.mhhe.com/socscience/anthropology/supersite/
[McGraw-Hill Anthropology SuperSite]
http://www.indiana.edu/~ensiweb/home.html
[ENSI/SENSI: Evolution]
http://www.lizardpoint.com/fun/geoquiz/index.html
[Test Your Geography Knowledge]
http://www.earthchangestv.com/index.htm
[Earth Change News]
http://www.utm.edu/research/iep/
[The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy]
http://www.californiacoastline.org/
[California Coastal Records Project]
http://www.sachistoryonline.org/
{Sacramento History Online]
http://www.cia.gov/ [The
Central Intelligence Agency]
http://www.anthro.mankato.msus.edu/emuseum1.html [E-Museum}
Minnesota State University]
"Google has turned into a global sensation and is now widely regarded as the pre-eminent search engine [stress added]." Ben Elgin & Ronald Griver, 2003,Yahoo! Act Two. Business Week, June 2, 2003, pages 70 -76, pages 72-73.
"There's a fair amount of decelptive and misleading information on the Internet that is posing as truth.... Factors to consider: 1. Who wrote it? 2. Who published it? 3. is the information current, accurate, and complete? 4. Is the information presented in an objective manner? 5. How often is the site updated? 6. Is the document well written? [stress added]." LaJean Humphries, 2002, How to Evaluate a Web Site. In Web of Deception: Misinformation on the Internet (Anne P. Mintz, Editor) ( Medford NJ: Information Today, Inc.), pages 165-173, page 165.
V. THE SCOPE OF ANTHROPOLOGY / FIELD METHODS: WHAT WE DO
A. Fieldwork in the Polynesian Kingdom of Tonga and Spring
1997 sabbatical research and
B. THE YANOMAMO: A MULTIDISCIPLINARY STUDY:
Comments on the Yanomamo of South America.
"In 1589 the Jesuit scholar José de Acosta, who lived and traveled widely in South America, proposed that native Americans were descended from people who had migrated from Siberia. More than four hundred years later, Acosta's idea has held up pretty well [stress added]." Steve Olson, 2002, Mapping Human History: Discovering The Past Through Our Genes (Boston/New York: Houghton Mifflin Co.), page 195.
"We need to understand that the encounter of European Americans with the geography and native peoples of America forms a decisive element in who we are now and need to become [stress added]." Jacob Needleman, 2002, The American Soul: Rediscovering the Wisdom of the Founders (NY: Jeremy P. Tarcher/Putnam), page 40.
"The Yanomami have moved rapidly from the relative isolation of the rain forest to being involved in global battles to save their enrionment. When [ethnographic filmaker Timothy] Asch went back to the people he filmed twenty years ago, 'They looked at the films attentively and said that while they thought the films were quite accurate, it would be the 'kiss of death' for people to think that the Yanomami still live the way they appear to in the films. They suggested that I mkake a film about the way they live today' [stress added]." Jay Ruby, 2000, Picturing Culture: Explorations of Film & Anthropology (University of Chicago Press), page 134.
C. Comments on "Cyberspace! [below
in the electronic Guidebook].
VI. WHAT IS SCIENCE? / PERSPECTIVE(S)
"The cutting edge of knowledge is not in the known but in the unknown, not in knowing but in questioning. Facts, concepts, generalizations, and theories are dull instruments unless they are honed to a sharp edge by persistent inquiry about the unknown." Ralph H. Thompson [1911-1987] American Educator.
"How sad that so many people seem to think that science and religion are mutually exclusive [stress added]." Jane Goodall [with Phillip Berman], 1999, Reason For Hope: A Spiritual Journey (NY: Warner Books), page 174.
"In looking at science, life, and my fellow human beings, my mind in an undisciplined way detects the cosmic within the nitty gritty and the trivial within the infinite. I believe that deep and important issues should be approached with sufficient good humor to keep us from regarding our mutable opinions as eternal truths. While not ignoring the real tragedy in the world, I feel it important to concentrate on hope. Given the existential dilemma of forever unanswered questions about our universe, I believe that joy is more fun than sadness and no further from the elusive reality of things. In short, it should be possible to be profound without being boring or being afflicted with malaise [stress added]." Harold J. Morowitz, 1979, The Wine Of Life And Other Essays On Societies, Energy & Living Things, page ix-x.
"Science is a public undertaking with many filters that a claim must pass through before it's accepted as part of the current conventional wisdom. Two of the most important of those filters are the refereeing process for scientific articles and the repeatability test for experimental results [stress added]." John L. Castin, 2000, Paradigms Regained: A Further Exploration of the Mysteries of Modern Science (Harper Collins/William Morrow), page 11.
ARE YOU AWARE OF?: http://www.csuchico.edu/lins/chicorio/ [Chico Rio - Research Instruction On-Line]:
"ChicoRIO is a series of Web based, self-paced lessons designed to help you learn how to find information. The tutorials will help you sharpen your research, critical thinking, and term paper writing skills. ChicoRIO also links to campus computing resources and a tour of the Meriam Library. The sections of ChicoRIO can be completed in any order."
VII. INDIVIDUALS WHO MIGHT BE CONSIDERING A MAJOR in Anthropology should make an appointment with the Anthropology Department Chairman (Dr. William Loker, Butte Hall 311; phone 530-898-6192). Urbanowicz is the Advisor for the Minor in Anthropology.
VIII. Information on Urbanowicz and "Teaching" be viewed by clicking here: ESSAY #1 at the end of this printed Guidebook. ], and:
"Youth cannot know how age thinks and feels. But old men are guilty if they forget what it was to be young." (Albus Dumbledore, in} J. K. Rowling, 2003, Harry Potter And the Order of The Phoenix (NY: Scholastic Press), page 826.
IX. UNFORTUNATELY, FINALLY FOR THE END OF WEEK I:
NOTE: "The news that 1,400 college students across the country die every year from alcohol-related accidents [~3.8 every day!] comes as no surprise to Edith Heideman, a Palo Alto mother who lost her son to alcohol poisoning while he was rushing a fraternity at California State University at Chico. ... A study released yesterday by the federally supported Task Force on College Drinking ... [stated that] Alcohol abuse also played a role in more than 500,000 injuries and 70,000 cases of sexual assault or date rape [~1,944 every day]." Ray Delgado, 2002, Campus Boozing Toll. The San Francisco Chronicle, April 10, 2002, Page 1.
AFFINITY: A fundamental principle of relationship linking kin through marriage.
AGRICULTURE: A subsistence strategy involving intensive farming of permanent fields through the use of such means as the plow, irrigation, and fertilizer.
APPLIED ANTHROPOLOGY: Any use of anthropological knowledge to influence social interaction, to maintain or change social institutions, or to direct the course of cultural change.
CLAN: A kinship group normally comprising several lineages; its members are related by a unilineal descent rule, but it is too large to enable members to trace actual biological links to all other members.
CONSANGUINITY: The principle of relationship linking individuals by shared ancestry (blood).
CULTURE: The knowledge that is learned, shared, and used by people to interpret experience and generate behavior.
ECOLOGY: The study of the way organisms interact with each other within an environment.
ETHNOCENTRISM: A mixture of belief and feeling that one's own way of life is desirable and actually superior to others.
ETHNOGRAPHY: The task of discovering and describing a particular culture.
HORTICULTURE: A kind of subsistence strategy involving semi-intensive, usually shifting, agricultural practices. Slash-and-burn farming is a common example of horticulture.
HUNTING AND GATHERING: A subsistence strategy involving the foraging of wild, naturally occuring foods.
KINSHIP: The complex system of social relations based on marriage (affinity) and birth (consanguinity).
POLITICAL SYSTEM: The organization and process of making and carrying out public policy according to cultural categories and rules.
SHAMAN: A part-time religious specialist who controls supernatural power, often to cure people or affect the course of life's events.
SLASH AND BURN: A form of horticulture in which wild land is cleared and burned over, farmed, then permitted to lie fallow and revert to its wild state.
NOTE FROM April 9, 2001: "A Brazilian government expedition has made contact with members of an Amazon Indian tribe never before exposed to Western culture, a local news agency said yesterday. The Tsohon-djapa tribe lives in an area known as the Vale do Javari, wedged between two Amazon river tributaries, the Jutai and Jandiatuba rivers. The area is home to about a dozen tribes that have had little exposure to modern society [stress added]." [source: http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/]
Napoleon Chagnon points out that the Yanomamo population is probably around 10,000. These were distributed in approximately 125 widely scattered villages, with the population in each village ranging from 40 to 250 individuals. ..."Yanomamo culture, in its major focus, reverses the meaning of 'good' and 'desirable' as phrased in the ideal postulates of the Judaic-Christian tradition. A high capacity for rage, a quick flash point, and a willingness to use violence to obtain one's ends are considered desirable traits. Much of the behavior of the Yanomamo can be described as brutal, cruel, treacherous, in the value-laden terms of our own vocabulary. The Yanomamo themselves...do not at all appear to be mean and treacherous. As individuals they seem to be people playing their own cultural game....this is a study of a fierce people who engage in chronic warfare. It is also a study of a system of controls that usually hold in check the drive towards annihilation." (Napoleon Chagnon, Yanomamo: The Fierce People, 1968) ... "The most distinctive feature of Yanomamo technology is that it is very direct. No tool or technique is complicated enough to require specialized labor or raw materials. Each village, therefore, can produce every item of material culture it requires from the jungle resources around it. ... The jungle provides numerous varieties of food, both animal and vegetable. ... Although the Yanomamo spend almost as much time hunting as they do gardening, the bulk of their diet comes from foods that are cultivated. Perhaps 85 percent or more of their diet consists of domesticated rather than wild foods.... [stress added]." (Napoleon Chagnon, The Fierce People, 1968: 21-33)
VIDEO MISC: Alliances, feasts, trading: "Alliances between villages are the product of a developmental sequence that involves casual trading, mutual feasting, and finally the exchange of women. ... The feast and the alliance can and often do fail to establish stable, amicable relationships between sovereign villages. ... Yanomamo warfare proper is the raid."
WHY STUDY PEOPLE?: "...the Yanomamo, who dwell in the forests of southern Venezuela and consist of an estimated 20,000 people who live by subsistence farming in small villages. They are one of the few remaining tribes unaffected [!] by Western culture. ... The Yanomamo eat virtually no salt at all. Researchers observed 46 members of this tribe who were in their 40s, and found they had an average blood pressure of only 103/65. Another Amazonian tribe, the Carajas, take in little salt, calculated to be half a gram a day, and the average blood pressure of ten of their middle-aged people was slightly lower at 101/69. (The longevity of these people is not recorded, but if there is a link between salt, blood pressure and lifespand then we can assume they will probably all live to be a hundred.) John Emsley, 1998, Molecules At An Exhibition: Portraits Of Intriguiging Materials in Everyday Life, page 38)
"A nation's diet can be more revealing than its art or literature. On any given day in the United States about one-quarter of the adult population vists a fast food restaurant. During a relatively brief period of time, the fast food industry has helped to transform not only the American diet, but also our landscape, economy, workforce, and popular culture [stress added]." Eric Schlosser, 2001, Fast Food Nation (Boston/New York: Houghton Mifflin Co.), page 3.
NOTE: "An overwhelming amount of preventable disease in modern societies results from the devastating effects of a high-fat diet. Strokes and heart attacks, the greatest causes of early death in some social groups, result from arteries clogged with atherosclerotic lesions. ... The single thing most people can do to improve their health is to cut the fat content of their diets [stress added]." Randolph M. Nesse & George C. Williams, 1994, Why We Get Sick: The New Science of Darwinian Medicine, pages 148-149)
ELSEWHERE} "China and many other developing nations are rushing with equal speed into an emerging pandemic of heart disease.... Heart disease is poised to pitch China, with its 1.2 billion people, into a costly public health crisis. Already 40% of the deaths in China result from heart disease or strokes. ... By the end of last year [2001], the Chinese could eat locally at more than 400 McDonald's restaurants and about 600 KFC restaurants [stress added]." Steve Sternberg, 2002, World prospers, hearts suffer. USAToday, November 18, 2002, pages D1 + D2.
See: "The ABCs of College Loans: Between low rates and rebates you can cut your interest costs to as low as 2%" by Ann Tergesen in Business Week of May 12, 2003 (pages 104-106).
See: "The cost of attending four-year campuses jumped by more than a third in the last decade, far outpacing increases in parents' average income, says the College Board in New York." Loretta Kalb, 2003, Paying for college: It's a Money Hunt, The Sacramento Bee, May 18, 2003, page D1 and D3, page D1. The article also had the following web information about "saving and paying" for college:
http://www.wiredscholar.com [Resource for Applications]
http://www.petersons.com [ Peterson's Education Portal]
http://www.calpirgstudents.org [California's Student Environmental & Service Group]
http://www.salliemae.com [Information on Government-backed loans]
http://www.collegeboard.com [ College Board]
http://www.scholarshare.com [Golden State ScholarShare College Savings Trust
I. WHAT DOES AN ANTHROPOLOGIST DO FOR A LIVING? (CONTINUED) (Please see Europe http://www.culture.gouv.fr/culture/arcnat/chauvet/fr/index.html [20,000 year old cave paintings] and the Society for California Archaeology [http://www.scanet.org/] and "Evolution in China" (http://www.cruzio.com/~cscp/index.htm) and http://www.archaeology.org.
A knowledge of the substantive data pertinent to the several sub disciplines of anthropology and familiarity with major issues relevant to each.Familiarity with the forms of anthropological literature and basic data sources and knowledge of how to access such information.
Knowledge of the methodology appropriate to the sub-disciplines of anthropology and the capacity to apply appropriate methods when conducting anthropological research.
II. READINGS in Spradley & McCurdy, 2002, Conformity And
Conflict, as well as below in this Guidebook.
"Economy and Globalization" [Overview], pages
158-162.
"Reciprocity and the Power of Giving" by Lee Cronk, pages
163-169.
"Cultivating the Tropical Rain Forest" by Richard K. Reed, pages
134-143.
"The Kayapo Resistance" by Terrence Turner, pages 387-404.
"Using Anthropology" by David W. McCurdy, pages 415-427.
III. "Harry sorted through his presents and found one with Hermione's handwriting on it. She had given him too a book that resembled a diary, except that it said things like 'Do it today or later you'll pay!' every time he opened a page." J. K. Rowling, 2003, Harry Potter And the Order of The Phoenix (NY: Scholastic Press), page 501.
IV. ON TRAVEL AND THE GROWTH OF ANTHROPOLOGY
"Travel teaches seven important lessons [according to Arthur Frommer, age 76, author of travel books].... 1. Travelers learn that all people in the world are basically alike. ... 2. Travelers discover that everyone regards himself or herself as wiser and better than other people in the world. ... 3. Travel makes us care about strangers. ... 4. Travel teaches that not everyone shares your beliefs. ... 5. Travelers learn that there is more than one solution to a problem. ... 6. Travel teaches you to be a minority. ... 7. Travel teaches humility." Larry Bleiberg, 2003, Among Travel's Seven Important Lessons is Humility. The Sacramento Bee, February 2, 2003, page M3.
V. PLEASE THINK ABOUT finding "meaningful patterns in the data"
such as:
A. Contemporary American Culture
B. "100 percent American" (please see
below for this week in this Guidebook).
C. What Is Culture?
D. Human Biological Diversity / Taxonomy and the Primate
Order
E. ANY Significance to: Victoria, Mel B, Geri, Mel C?
F. ANY Significance to: Emily Robinson, Natalie Maines, Margie
Maguire?
G. Jack, Kack, Lack, Mack, Nack, Ouack, Pack, and Quack?
H. ANY Significance to: O, T, T, F, F, S, S, E, N,
?
"The whole of science is nothing more than a refinement of everyday thinking." (Albert Einstein [1879-1955], 1921 Nobel Laureate in Physics, Ideas and Opinions, 1954: page 65)
"In addition to solving puzzles, science also builds understanding by revealing the properties of the world and the relationships between them. Here again, the methods that scientists employ find widespread use in everyday life. From infancy onward, each person measures and classifies the properties of unfamiliar objects in order to integrate them into a larger worldview--from a ten-month-old learning to stack blocks, to Charles Darwin cataloging specimens aboard the Beagle [stress added]." Arno Penzias [1978 Nobel Laureate in Physics], 1989, Ideas And Information: Managing In A High-Tech World (NY: Simon & Schuster), page 177.
"Understanding history is a way of understanding the present. In a changing world it is important to recognise the characteristics which identify us as the social individuals that we are. Globalisation need not be a problem if we understand our identity, and if we are capable of understanding our past we can then build on that [stress added]." Parque Histórico Guayaquil, Ecuador, 1999.
"Literacy can imply more than the ability to read. It can mean having a knowledge of one's history, of one's origins; having a world view that is indigenous to one's people and not imposed by others [stress added]." Josephine Donovan, 2001, Feminist Theory: The Intellectual Traditions, 3rd edition (New York/London: Continuum). From the preface to the first edition of 1985, page 15.
PALEOANTHROPOLOGY = the science of placing the "chain" or "tree" of the pieces together. It "has been one of the most argumentative of sciences since its beginning. ... It is a heart-quickening thought that we share the same genetic heritage with the hands that shaped the tool that we can now hold in our own hands, and with the mind that decided to make the tool that our minds can now contemplate [stress added]." (Richard Leakey and Roger Lewin, Origins, 1977: 8.
V. APPROPRIATE VISUALS
"The important thing is not to stop questioning. Curiosity has its own reason for existing. One cannot help but be in awe when he [or she!] contemplates the mysteries of eternity, of life, of the marvelous structures of reality. It is enough if one tries merely to comprehend a little of this mystery every day. Never lose a holy curiosity [stress added]." Albert Einstein (1879-1955)
A. VIDEO: THE MAN HUNTERS (Please see Video Notes Below):
"Human being are the result of the same evolutionary process that produced the entire vast diversity of living things. Yet we cannot help but think of ourselves as somehow significantly 'different' from the rest of nature." Ian Tattersall, 1998, Becoming Human: Evolution And Human Uniqueness, page 78.
"British archaeologists revealed an Ice Age excavation site Tuesday [June 25, 2002] that they hope will provide some of the strongest evidence yet that neanderthals hunted mammoths. The 50,000-year-old remains, in a gravel pit near Thetford in eastern England, may provide the evidence needed to solve the hotly contested debate over whether the squat, muscular predecessors of modern humans actually hunted large animals or just scavenged dead ones for meat [stress added]." Anon., 2002, Site holds clues to neanderthal survival. USA Today, June 26, 2002, Page 8D.
"Childhood rickets--a bone-softening disease that had become so rare the government stopped keeping statistics on it--is making a comeback, in part because some youngsters are not getting enought sunlight, health officials say. ... The resurgence has been seen particularly among children breast-fed by African American mothers. Dark-skinned people absorb less sunlight." Associated Press. The San Francisco Chronicle, Friday March 30, 2001.
B. Brief Introduction to Charles Darwin (1809-1882).
"He was an Englishman who went on a five-year voyage when he was young and then retired to a house in the country, not far from London. He wrote an account of his voyage, and then he wrote a book setting down his theory of evolution, based on a process he called natural selection, a theory that provided the foundation for modern biology. He was often ill and never left England again [stress added]." John P. Wiley, Jr., 1998, Expressions: The Visible Link. Smithsonian, June, pages 22-24, page 22.
"The Galapagos Island finches once studied by Charles Darwin respond quickly to changes in food supply by evolving new beaks and body sizes, according to researchers who studied the birds for almost 30 years. Starting in 1973, husband-and-wife researchers Peter and Rosemary grant of Princeton University have followed the evolutionary changes in two types of birds, the ground finch and the cactus finch, on Daphne Major, one of the Galapagos islands. In a study appearing today in the Journal Science, the Grants report that climate and weather have a dramatic effect on the evolutionary path the finches follow. Ground finches most eat small seeds, and their beaks have adapted to that purpose. When the weather turned dry in 1977, most of the plants that produce small seeds on Daphne Major were killed, leaving little food for finches with modest beaks. Most died off, but some ground finches with bigger, stronger beaks survived [stress added]." Anon., 2002, Finches Shown To Be Able to Change. The Chico Enterprise-Record, April 26, 2002, page 11A.
"The great value of Darwinism, it seems to me, was that it jolted modern men into questioning various sentimental beliefs about nature and man's place in it. In this, Darwin's influence closely parallels that of Galileo [1564-1642]. Just as the first modern astronomers and physicists destroyed a naive geocentrism, so Darwin and his successorsoverwhelmingly displaced what may be called homocentrism, the belief that nature exists for the sake of man [stress added]." Jacob Needleman, 1975, A Sense of the Cosmos: The Encounter of Modern Science and Ancient Truth (NY: Doubleday & Co., Inc.), page 72.
"RESEARCHERS PRODDED and annoyed lifelike digital entities over more than 15,000 generations to learn that evolution among simple creatures is in fact based on the Darwinian notion of survival of the fittest, and that the progress is plodding. 'The little things, they definitely count,' says Richard Lenski, a Michigan State University evolutionary biologist who worked with a team of scientists from diverse backgrounds in creating and fostering artificial life inside a computer [stress added]" From: http://www.msnbc.com/news/910521.asp?0si=-&cp1=1 [and the story continues]... Robert Roy Britt, May 7, 2003, Cyber-life obeys Darwinian theory: Computer simulation lets digital organisms evolve.
CULTURAL ENVIRONMENT: The categories and rules people use to classify and explain their physical environment.
DESCENT: A Rule of relationship that ties people together on the basis of reputed common ancestry.
DIVISION OF LABOR: The rules that govern the assignment of jobs to people.
DIFFUSION: The passage of a cultural category, culturally defined behavior, or culturally produced artifact from one society to another through borrowing.
ECOLOGY: The study of the way organisms interact with each other within an environment.
ENDOGAMY: Marriage within a designated social unit.
ETHNOCENTRISM: A mixture of belief and feeling that one's own way of life is desirable and actually superior to others.
ETHNOGRAPHY: The task of discovering and describing a particular culture.
EXOGAMY: Marriage outside any designated group.
HUNTING AND GATHERING: A subsistence strategy involving the foraging of wild, naturally occurring foods.
INCEST TABOO: The cultural rule that prohibits sexual intercourse and marriage between specified classes of relatives.
INNOVATION: A recombination of concepts from two or more mental configurations into a new pattern that is qualitatively different from existing forms.
NUCLEAR FAMILY: A family composed of a married couple and their children.
PRODUCTION: The process of making something.
"Les Eyzies is the normal point of first entry for visitors to the land of prehistory. It has a national museum, the cave where Cro-Magnon man was discovered, and much else--all in the midst of spectacular scenery. ... The National Museum of Prehistory lies within Les Eyzies, in a structure built into the side of a cliff, with overhanging rock above, which was originally a thirteenth-century fortress. It houses a rich collection of prehistoric items, not only from the Dordogne but also from other French archaeological sites...." Charles Tanford & Jacqueline Reynolds, 1992, The Scientific Traveller: A Guide to the People, Places, and Institutions of Europe, page 205.
Les Eyzies-De-Tayax-Sireuil = "The science of prehistory originated in this village....The first drawing of a mammoth was discovered here along with the first skeleton of Cro-Magnon Man, 30,000 years ago." Anon., 1988, The Hachette Guide To France (NY: Pantheon Books), page 111.
"The Dordogne River twisted in loops like a brown snake in the valley it had cut hundreds of thousands of years before." Michael Crichton, 1999, Timeline (Ballantine Books November 2000 Paperback), page 43.
"In 1856, at the very time Charles Darwin was writing The Origin of Species [published in 1859!],which would popularize the revolutionary concept of evolution worldwide, the fossilized remains of a stocky, powerful, human-like creature were discovered in a German valley called Neander Tal." Erik Trinkaus and Pat Shipman, 1993, The Neanderthals: Changing The Image of Mankind .
"Fighting in China following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941 resulted in a paleoanthropological disaster. The largest and most complete collection of human fossil remains--unearthed at Zhoukoudian, near Beijing--vanished after being entrusted to a platoon of U.S. Marines on its way to the harbor of Tianjin." Jean-Jacques Hublin, 1999, The Quest For Adam. Archaeology, July/August, pages 26-35, page 26.
Charles F. Hockett, 1973, Man's Place in Nature, page 387 [CSUChico GN/31/H6] ="range" of cranial capacity: Modern Man [Homo sapiens] 850 to 1700+ cubic centimeters; Neanderthal 1200 to 1640 cc.; Homo erectus 775 to 1225 cc.; Australopithecus 435 to 700 cc.; Gorillas 340 to 752 cc.; and Chimpanzees 320 to 420 cc.
"The many caves in the Sterkfontein Valley have produced abundant scientific information on the evolution of modern man over the past 3.5 million years, on his way of life, and on the animals with which he lived and on which he fed. The landscape also preserves many features of that of prehistoric man."http://whc.unesco.org/sites/915.htm [The Fossil Homind Sites of Sterkfontein, Swartkans, Kromdraai, and Environs, South Africa} 1999]
PLEASE NOTE:
"Evolution does not make predictions, species don't know where they're going, humans did not have to evolve. In fact, if we were to rewind the tape to ten million years ago, when apes dominated the primate world, there would be no assurance that humans would evolve again. But humans have evolved, we are here today. Like no other species that has ever lived, we control the life of all living things--including ourselves. When we understand and accept that we are part of the continuum of life, we will be in a better position to make informed choices--choices which will ensure a better world for all species. Extinction is forever. We must not let it happen. Education is the great liberator. It frees us to think objectively. My studies of human evolution have taught me to respect the natural world. They have also taught me that all humans have a common origin and, therefore, a common destiny--the outcome of which will be determined by humankind itself. We do have the capacity to make the future a long and fruitful one, if only we will take the time to learn who we are and how we fit into the natural world [stress added]. (Donald C. Johanson, 1993, from the "Forward" to Ian Tattersall's 1993, The Human Odyssey: Four Million Years of Human Evolution (Prentice Hall), page xiii.
"Humanity's plot thickens. The 'Toumai' skull isn't much to look at: a nearly complete cranium, some jawbones and a few teeth. But scientists are calling him [or her!] the most important discovery since the first fossilized remains of human ancestors were found 75 years ago. Why? Because Toumai pushes back by a million years the date when humanity's family tree is believed to have sprouted. ... Who knows which theories will hold? The only thing Toumai's discovery proves beyond a doubt is that he's a tiny part of a still-mysterious story [stress added]." USAToday "Editorial" on July 12, 2002, Page 8A.
"At between 6 and 7 million years old, this skull is the earliest known record of the human family. Discovered in Chad in Central Africa, the new find, nicknamed 'Toumaï', comes from the crucial yet little-known interval when the human lineage was becoming distinct from that of chimpanzees. Because of this, the new find will galvanize the field of human origins like no other in living memory &emdash; perhaps not since 1925, when Raymond Dart described the first 'ape-man', Australopithecus africanus, transforming our ideas about human origins forever. A lifetime later, Toumaï raises the stakes once again and the consequences cannot yet be guessed. Dart's classic paper was published in Nature, as have most of the milestones in human origins and evolution. To celebrate the new find, we are proud to offer a selection of ten of the very best from Nature's archives, including Dart's classic paper [stress added]." FROM: http://www.nature.com/nature/ancestor/ and see http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?articleID=000B16B6-AA5E-1D2C-97CA809EC588EEDF [Scientific American July 11, 2002 and in http://www.sciam.com/, December 26, 2002]
"Our solid American citizen awakens in a bed built on a pattern which originated in the Near East but which was modified in Northern Europe before it was transmitted to America. He [or she] throws back covers made from cotton, domesticated in India, or linen, domesticated in the Near East, or wool from sheep, also domesticated in the Near East, or silk, the use of which was discovered in China. All of these materials have been spun and woven by processes invented in the Near East. He slips into his moccasins, invented by the Indians of the eastern woodlands, and goes to the bathroom, whose fixtures are a mixture of European and American inventions, both of recent date. He takes off his pajamas, a garment invented in India, and washes with soap invented by the ancient Gauls. He then shaves, a masochistic rite which seems to have been derived from either Sumer or ancient Egypt.
Returning to the bedroom, he removes his clothes from a chair of southern European type and proceeds to dress. He puts on garments whose form originally derived from the skin clothing of the nomads of the Asiatic steppes, puts on shoes made from skins tanned by a process invented in ancient Egypt and cut to a pattern derived from the classical civilizations of the Mediterranean, and ties around his neck a strip of bright-colored cloth which is a vestigial survival of the shoulder shawls worn by the seventeenth-century Croatians. Before going out for breakfast he glances through the windows, made of glass invented in Egypt, and if it is raining puts on overshoes made of rubber discovered by the Central American Indians and takes an umbrella, invented in southeastern Asia. Upon his head he puts a hat made of felt, a material invented in the Asiatic steppes.
On his way to breakfast he stops to buy a paper, paying for it with coins, an ancient Lydian invention. At the restaurant a whole new series of borrowed elements confronts him. His plate is made of a form of pottery invented in China. His knife is of steel, an alloy first made in southern India, his fork a medieval Italian invention, and his spoon a derivative of a Roman original. He begins breakfast with an orange, from the eastern Mediterranean, a cantaloupe from Persia, or perhaps a piece of African watermelon. With this he has coffee, an Abyssinian plant, with cream and sugar. Both the domestication of cows and the idea of milking them originated in the Near East, while sugar was first made in India. After his fruit and first coffee he goes on to waffles, cakes made by a Scandinavian technique from wheat domesticated in Asia Minor. Over these he pours maple syrup, invented by the Indians of the eastern Woodlands. As a side dish he may have the eggs of a species of bird domesticated in Indo-China, or thin strips of the flesh of an animal domesticated in Eastern Asia which have been salted and smoked by a process developed in northern Europe.
When our friend has finished eating he settles back to smoke, an American Indian habit, consuming a plant domesticated in Brazil in either a pipe, derived from the Indians of Virginia, or a cigarette, derived from Mexico. If he is hardy enough he may even attempt a cigar, transmitted to us from the Antilles by way of Spain. While smoking, he reads the news of the day, imprinted in characters invented by the ancient Semites upon a material invented in China by a process invented in Germany. As he absorbs the accounts of foreign troubles, if he is a good conservative citizen, thank a Hebrew deity in an Indo-European language that he is 100 percent American."
I. CULTURE & ETHNOGRAPHY (CONTINUED) & Monkeys, Apes, and Man Video (see the Wisconsin Primate research site at http://www.primate.wisc.edu/pin/) or the University of California, Davis at http://www.crprc.ucdavis.edu/crprc/homepage.html, and http://www.gorilla.org/index.html [The Gorilla Foundation], or http://www.selu.com/~bio/PrimateGallery/main.html [The Primate Gallery], and http://www.janegoodall.org/ [Jane Goodall]; have a look at Professor Turhon Murad, CSU, Chico, and his "Skull Module" located at http://www.csuchico.edu/anth/Module/skull.html); and http://www.outdoorjapan.com/features/ojfeature-jigokudani.html [The Monkeys of Jigokudani]).
The ability to present and communicate in anthropologically appropriate ways anthropological knowledge and the results of anthropological research.Knowledge of the history of anthropological thought and major issues in the subdisciplines.
II. READINGS in Spradley & McCurdy, 2002, Conformity And
Conflict, as well as below in this Guidebook.
"Lessons from the Field" by George Gmelch, pages 45-67.
"Baseball Magic" by George Gmelch, pages 348-357.
"Career Advice for Anthropology Undergraduates" by John T. Omohundro,
pages 428-438.
III. PRIMATES
A. MODERN HUMANS
Carolus Linnaeus (1707-1778): "Latinized form of Carl von Linné. Swedish naturalist and physician. His botanical work Systema naturae 1735 contained his system for classfiying plants into groups depending on shared characteristics (such as the number of stamens in flowers), providing a much-needed framework for identification. He also devised the concise and precise system for naming plants and animals, using one Latin (or Latinized) word to represent the genus and a second to distinguish the species." Sarah Jenkins Jones (Editor), 1996, Random House Webster's Dictionary of Scientists, page 299.
"If today's students want to understand how scientists mapped the human genetic code,they won't get much help from their high school textbooks, a group of scientists and educators said Tuesday. ... They said the books ... missed the big picture. They don't flesh out the four basic ideas driving today's research: how cells work, how matter and energy flow from one source to another, how plants and animals evolve and the molecular basis of heredity. ... the books do not encourage students to examine their ideas or relate lessons to hands-on experiments and everyday life....[stress added]." Anon., 2000, Report calls science texts flawed. The Sacramento Bee, June 28, 2000, page A12.
"Twelve of the most popular science textbooks used at middle schools nationwide are riddled with errors, a new study has found. Researchers compiled 500 pages of errors, ranging from the equator passing through the southern United States to a photo of Linda Ronstadt labeled as a silicon crystal. None of the 12 textbooks has an acceptable level of accuracy....estimated that about 85 percent of children in the United States used the textbooks examined....'They just don't seem to understand what science is about" [stress added]." Associated Press, 2001, The Sacramento Bee, January 15, 2001, page A7.
"Often Gary's [Larson] cartoons help us to see things with a new perspective, above all to realize that we humans, after all, are just one species among many, just one small part of the wondrous animal kingdom. ... Crazy. Absurd. Yet it all helps to put us humans in our place. And we desperately need putting in our place [stress added]." Jane Goodall. 1995, Foreward. The Far Side Gallery 5 (Kansas City: Andrews and McMeel), no page number [pages 5-8, pages 6-7].
"Research shows that kids these days are growing up faster and earlier than the Leave It To Beaver bunch. They're techno-wizard multi-taskers with more computing power at their fingertips than was used to get Apollo 11 [July 1969] to the moon. And they're media-savvy, with cable in their bedrooms, cellphones in their backpacks and 15 PC windows open at a time for instant messaging [stress added]." Ann Oldenburg, 2000, Kid-Fluence. USA Today, December 29, 2000, pages E1 and E2, page E1.
"Self-centered creatures that we are, we pay the greatest amount of attention to our own evolution. Like moneys, apes, lemurs, and tarsiers, we are primates. Our closest living relative is the chimpanzee. Humans and chimpanzees are genetically very close. They share about 98.5 percent of their DNA. But we are not, of course, descended from chimpanzees or from any other living ape. The human and ape lines diverged about five million years ago. In other words, humans and apes have a common ancestor, and both have been evolving for 5 million years since the split [stress added]." Richard Morris, 2001, The Evolutionists: The Struggle for Darwin's Soul (NY: W.H. Freeman and Co.), page 34.
"By studying monkeys, apes and other animals, scientists are learning how really important it is to kiss and make up soon after a furious fight. Long-term observations of groups of primates show that social animals use well-established peacemaking tactics to smooth over bruised feelings caused by combat. There is far more advantage in friendship and cooperation than in sulking and alienation [stress added]." Robert Cooke, 1999, Better to Hug Than Sulk, Apes Find. The Sacramento Bee, February 19, 1999, page A13
"Dr. [Judy] Cameron has just received a five-year grant from the National institutes of Health that will enable her to examine the genes of the baby [rhesus] monkeys who exhibit anxiety in response to the human intruder as well as other stressful situations in the laboratory. Already, Dr. Cameron has seen that the trait can be inherited and passed on; it clearly runs in monkey families. Because her monkeys -- 400 of them in Pittsburgh and 3,5000 at the Oregon National Primate Research Center in Beaverton, Ore. -- are part of research colonies that have existed since the 1960s, Dr. Cameron knows which monkeys are related, making it easier to trace the traits and ultimately to home in on genes that are inherited [stress added]." Mary Duenwald, 2002, Lab Monkeys May Reveal Secrets of Childhood Depression. The New York Times, December 24, 2002, pages D5 + D8, page D8.
"A troop of about 40 monkeys went on a rampage in a western Bangladesh village after one of their young was accidentally electrocuted, according to the Bengali-language newspaper Sangbad. The paper reported that the larke monkeys, known locally as 'hanumans,' were eating nuts given to them by the residents, but ran off when a stone was thrown at them. The incident sent a baby monkey to its death as it became entangled in a high-voltage line. The surviving monkeys returned to the scene and used sticks to attsack several homes and shops in the village, the newspaper said. The troop later left, taking the baby monkey's body into the forest [stress added]." Steve Newman, 2003, Violent revenge. The San Francisco Chronicle, July 12, 2003, page C8.
B. NATURAL SELECTION: "The process of differential survival and reproduction that results in changes in gene frequencies and in the characteristics that the genes encode." Paul W. Ewald, 1994, Evolution of Infectious Disease, page 220.
"Promising results from monkey experiments raise hopes for vaccine. ... For 600 days and counting, monkeys given an experimental new AIDS vaccine have survived with no signs of illness despite exposure to lethal does of the virus, raising hopes that scientists may be headed at last toward an effective vaccine for people." Daniel Q. Haney, 2001, The Chico Enterprise-Record, September 7, 2001.
"Alarmed by the growing ability of disease-causing microbes to fight off once-effective drugs, the World Health Organization warned Monday that the medical and veterinary professions must use antibiotics and other medicines more wisely or face the likelihood they will not effectively combat disease in the future [stress added]." Marc Kaufman, 2000, World Health Organization Warns of Antibiotic Misuse. The Sacramento Bee, June 13, 2000, page A6.
"About 70% of the antibiotics produced in the USA each year - nearly 25 million pounds in all - are fed to healthy pigs, chickens and cattle to prevent disease or speed growth, says a report released Monday [January 8, 2001]. Such 'excessive' use of antibiotics in livestock is contributing ...[to] many of the microbes that plague humans....[stress added]." Anita Manning, 2001, Healthy Livestock Given More Antibiotics Than Ever. USA Today, January 9, 2001, page 8D
"Roughly 20 million pounds of antibiotics are given each year to U.S. cattle, piugs, and chickens [stress added]." Sirley Leung, 2003, McDonald's Wants Suppliers Of Meat to limit Antibiotic Use. The Wall Street Journal, June 20, 2003, page B2.
"McDonald's Corp. said Thursday [June 19, 2003] it is directing its meat suppliers worldwide to phase out the use of growth-promoting antibiotics in animals because of concerns that the practice lessens the drugs' effectiveness in humans. ... Doctors are increasingly confronting germs that have become antibiotic-resistant. Many scientists believe that the overuse of antibiotics in humans and livestock is causing many drugs to lose their efffectiveness by speeding up [EVOLUTION!!] the rate at which bacteria become resistant [NATURAL SELECTION!!] [stress added]." Anon. 2003, Consumer deman leads McDonald's to cut antibiotics in meat. The Chico Enterprise-Record, June 20, 2003, page 5A.
"McDonald's said it was making the change because of growing evidence that the use of antibiotics in farm animals was creating antibiotic resistance in animals and in the bacteria that cause diseases in humans [stress added]." David Barboza with Sherri Day, 2003, McDonald's Asking Meat industry to Cut Use of Antibiotics. The New York Times, June 20, 2003, Page A1 + C2, page A1.
"In a frustrating development in the medical fight against drug-resistant bacteria, scientists report that the first entirely new type of antibiotic [Zyvox] in 35 years has been beaten by a super-germ little more than a year after the drug was introduced. Researchers at Harvard Medical School describe in the Lancet medical journal this week...." Associated Press, The San Francisco Chronicle, July 20, 2001, page A3.
"A hidden epidemic of life-threatening infections in America's hospitals is needlessly killing tens of thousands of patients each year. These infections are often characterized by the health-care industry as random and inevitable byproducts of lifesaving care. But a [Chicago] Tribune investigation found that in 2000, nearly three-quarters of the deadly infections--or about 75,000--were preventable, the result of unsanitary facilities, germ-laden instruments and unwashed hands. ... Deaths linked to hospital germs now represent the fourth-leading cause of mortality among Americans, behind heart disease, cancer and strokes, according to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. ... Even a term adopted by the CDC -- nosocomial infection -- obscures the true source of the germs. Nosocomial is Latin for 'hospital.' CDC records show that the term was used to shield hospitals from the 'embarrassment' of germ-related deaths and injuries [stress added]." Michael Berens, 2002, Death by Hospital infection. The Sacramento Bee, July 21, 2002, page 1 and A20.
"Medical errors are killing tens of thousands of Americans each year and harming countless more.... Three years ago the Institute of medicine estimated that 44,000 to 98,000 patients die each year because of medical mistakes [~120-to-240/day]--more than are killed annually by automobile accidents [stress added].' Editorial, The New York Times, December 18, 2002, page A32.
"In a finding sure to shake up the $20 billion market for blood-pressure medication, a 10-cents-a-pill diuretic proved superior to two of the pharmaceutical industry's biggest-selling classes of drugs in a major U.S.-funded study." Ron Wilson and Scott Hensley, 2002, Study Questions high-Cost Drugs For Hypertension. The Wall Street Journal, December 18, 2002, Page 1 and page 7, page 1.
"Astra-Zeneca, the large pharmaceutical company, pleaded guilty today [June 20, 2003] to a felony charge of health care fraud and agreed to pay $355 million to settle criminal and civil accusations that it engaged in a nationwide scheme to illegally market a prostate cancer drug. The government said the company's employees had given illegal financial inducements to as many as 400 doctors across the country to persuade them to prescribe the drug [stress added]." Melody Petersen, AstraZeneca Pleads Guilty In Cancer medicine Scheme. The New York Times, June 20, 2003, page B1 and B4, page B1.
"A division of the pharmaceutical company Bayer sold millions of dollars of blood-clotting medicines for hemophiliacs--medicines that carried a high risk of transmitting AIDS--to Asia and latin America in the mid-1980's while selling a new, safer product in the West, according to documents obtained by The New York Times." Walt Bogdanich and Eric Koli, 2003, 2 Paths of Bayer Drug in 80's: Riskier Type Went Overseas. The New York Times, May 22, 2003, Page A1 + C5, page A1.
"Scientists should combine five widely used drugs into a single pill that doctors would give to everyone older than 54, potentially protecting millions of people from heart attacks and strokes, researchers proposed yesterday. The benefits of the polypill would easily outweigh the risks because the pill would incorporate medicines proven to be generally safe -- aspirin, the nutrient folic acid and well-studied medications that cut blood pressure and cholesterol, the researchers said. An analysis of more than 750 studies involving 400,000 people indicates that combined, these drugs would slash the risk of heart attacks by 88 percent and the risk of strokes by 80 percent, the researchers reported in three papers being published in Saturday's British Medical Journal [stress added]." Washington Post, Rob Stein, June 27, 2003, from: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A37370-2003Jun26.html?nav=hptoc_h; and see Mary Duenwald, 2003, Daily Pill Proposed to Fight Cardiovascular Disease. The New York Times, June 27, 2003, page A4: "The polypill...has yet to be created."
C. CONTROVERSY: The "Scopes Trial" of July 1925 in Dayton, Tennessee:
On Clarence Darrow (1857-1938): "He had a tremendous lust for life, yet he came about as close to living according to the Sermon on the Mount as could any man trying to earn his way in a competetive world. He was a man with all the faults, shortcomings and inadequacies of a man, but he was a civilized human being in that he could not endure to see his fellow human being suffer. His quarrel had never been with religion itself but with those creeds which turned their backs on education and science; his quarrel with these forms of worship was on the ground that they operated against the welfare of their own people." Irving Stone, Clarence Darrow: For The Defense (NY: Bantam), page 275.
from: The World's Most Famous Court Trial: Tennessee Evolution Case (1925) (1990 Reprint Edition published by Bryan College, Dayton, Tennessee), page 87; the court transcript points out that Clarence Darrow said: "If today you can take a thing like evolution and make it a crime to teach it in the public school, tomorrow you can make it a crime to teach it in the private schools, and the next year you can make it a crime to teach it to the hustings or in the church. At the next session you may ban books and the newspapers. Soon you may set Catholic against Protestant and Protestant against Protestant, and try to foist your own religion upon the minds of men. If you can do one you can do the other. Ignorance and fanaticism is ever busy and needs feeding. Always it is feeding and gloating for more. Today it is the public school teachers, tomorrow the preachers and the lecturers, the magazines, the books, the newspapers. After while, your honor, it is the setting of man against man and creed against creed until with flying banners and beating drums we are marching backward to the glorious ages of the sixteenth century when bigots lighted fagots to burn the men who dared to bring any intelligence and enlightenment and culture to the human mind [stress added]."
"An agnostic is a doubter. The word is generally applied to those who doubt the verity of accepted religious creeds or faiths. Everyone is an agnostic as to the beliefs or creeds they do not accept. Catholics are agnostic to the Protestant creeds, and the Protestants are agnostic to the Catholic creed. Anyne who thinks is an agnostic about something, otherwise he [or she!] must believe that he is possessed of all knowledge. And the proper place for such a person is in the madhouse or the home for the feeble-minded. In a popular way, in the Western world, an agnostic is one who doubts or disbelieves the main tenets of the Christian faith [stress added]." Clarence Darrow [1857-1938], 1994, Why I Am an Agnostic and Other Essays (NY: Prometheus Books), page 11.
D. RECENT CONTROVERSY:
"A parent's request that Roseville high schools teach ideas that rebut Darwin's theory of evolution could set the stage for debate over what critics call the newest version of creationism. When Roseville Joint Union High School District trustees took the first step toward approving a new biology textbook earlier this month, parent Larry Caldwell asked that supplementary materials be taught in conjunction with the text, which, like most biology books, presents the theory of evolution to explain the origins of life. ... Caldwell said he would like to work with district officials in gathering educational materials that present a theory called 'intelligent design.' ... Intelligent design proponents say natural selection doesn't adequately explain the complexity of the universe. Instead, they say, life is the product of a directed process with intention [stress added]." Laurel Rosen, 2003, Darwin faces a new rival. The Sacramento Bee, June 22, 2003, page B1 + B3.
Laurel Rosen, 2003, Roseville sticks with evolution: School trustees OK a text that teaches Darwin but may add material disputing his theory. The Sacramento Bee, July 3, 2003, pages B1 + B2.
IV. ON TRAVEL AND THE GROWTH OF ANTHROPOLOGY and Darwin Cont. (1809-1882).
"Thomas Jefferson [1743-1826] is very often cited as the 'father' of American archaeology, and he certainly attempted one of the first archaeological explanations of the question ["Who Got here First?"] when he wrote in his famous 'Notes on Virginia' (1787) about an Indian mound that he had excavated many years before. However, his strongest evidence to support his belief in an Asian origin (via the Bering Strait) of the Native Americans was from his study of Indian languages. He cited the diversity of these languages as proof that they had been here a long time [stress added]." Stephen William, 1992, Who Got To America First? Anthropology Explored: The Best Of Smithsonian Anthro Notes, 1998, edited by Ruth O. Selig and Marilyn R. London, pages 141-149, page 144.
"The farther backward you can look, the farther forward you are likely to see." Sir Winston Churchill [1874-1965], 1953 Nobel Prize Winner in Literature and "In the field of observation, chance only favors those who are prepared." Louis Pasteur [1822-1895]
V. REMINDER:
A. EXAM I (20%) IS ON FRIDAY
SEPTEMBER 26, 2003.
"The scene is rugged. ... Jogokudani [Yamanouchi, Japan] is as far north as it gets for monkeys. No primate, with the exception of humans, is known to live in a colder climate." Eric Talmadge, 2002, World's northernmost wild monkeys enjoy hot springs heaven. The Chico Enterprise-Record, June 23, 2002, page E1 + E2, page E1. (AND SEE: http://www.outdoorjapan.com/features/ojfeature-jigokudani.html [The Monkeys of Jigokudani])
WHY STUDY PRIMATES? = PRIMATES = taxonomic term which is always capitalized and is a fixed plural. "A decade-long baboon study indicates that lecithin, a soybean extract used in many processed foods, can delay and perhaps even prevent alcohol cirrhosis of the liver." R. Cowen, Science News, December 1, 1990: 340.
"Harry Harlow [1905-1981] is probably the most famous psychologist you've never heard of. Back in the 1960s, his work was widely covered in the press--and with good reason. Through a series of briliiant experiments, Harlow proved that love, despite what most of his colleagues believed, plays a crucial role in mental well-being. The idea that such a thing needed proving in the fcirst place seems bizarre today ... Harlow's descent into obscurity had a lot to do with the man himself. ... But it was the way he treated [rhesus] monkeys that hurt his reputation. Harlow went on to study what happened when monkeys were deprived of love, kept in solitary confinement and emotioally tormented [stress added]." Michael Lemonick, Book Review of Deborah Blum's 2002 Love at Goon Park. Time, November 18, 2002. And if interested, please see: http://pubpages.unh.edu/~jel/Harlow.html
"Promising results from monkey experimentd raise hopes for vaccine. ... For 600 days and counting, monkeys given an experimental new AIDS vaccine have survived with no signs of illness despite exposure to lethal does of the virus, raising hopes that scientists may be headed at last toward an effective vaccine for people." Daniel Q. Haney, 2001, The Chico Enterprise-Record, September 7, 2001.
"An experimental vaccine against the monkey form of AIDS sharply reduced but did not eliminate the amount of virus in the animals' blood. ... In the experiment, 10 macaques that had been infected.... [stress added]." Robert Cooke, 1999, Better to Hug Than Sulk, Apes Find. The San Francisco Chronicle, December 23, 2002, page A5.
"Four years after arguing that humans probably got the AIDS virus from butchering chimpanzees for food, the same researchers say they have traced the origin back one step further: to the monkies that the chimpanzees ate [stress added]." Donald G. McNeil Jr., 2003, Researchr have New Theory on Origin of AIDS Virus. The New York Times, June 13, 2003, page A25.
"Scientists have infected rhesus monkeys with polio, coaxed them into space and cloned them. Researchers liked working with them for a simple reason: their great similarity to people. Now, though, rhesus monkeys have become so scarce and expensive that scientists are forced to look for alternatives [stress added]." Sarah Lueck, 2002, Monkey Deficit Crimps Labs. The Wall Street Journal, May 14, 2002.
"In an experiment unfolding under tight security, six rust and silver monkeys this past week grew listless, refused to eat, and broke out in blisters. Four have become sick, and two have died. The cause: smallpox. ... The point of the experiment here is to create an animal model of human smallpox." Marilyn Chase, June 26, 2002, In Strictest Security, Scientists Are Giving Smallpox to Monkeys. The Wall Street Journal, June 26, 2002, page 1 + 8, page 1.
"Currently, there is no approved treatment for smallpox. Tests on monkeys infected with smallpox last month [June 2002] could help fill that gap." Marilyn Chase, July 16, 2002, Monkey Tests May Help Scientists Find Ways to Foil Smallpox Virus. The Wall Street Journal, July 16, 2002, page D3.
WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THE FOLLOWING?: "The kind of man's face a woman finds attractive varies with her menstrual cycle, according to a study that underscores the hold biology still has on us, no matter how highly evolved we like to think we are. When a woman is ovulating, or ready to conceive, she is likely to prefer men with more masculine features. When she is menstruating, or least likely to get pregnant, she is apt to prefer softer, more feminine looks. That's according to a study conducted by Scottish and Japanese researchers and published in today's issue of the journal Nature. The researchers beleive this is not a matter of fashion or a 20th-century standard of beauty, but something that is inborn, or instilled by evolution for sound biological reasons: In the animal kingdom, masculine looks denote virility, and thus the ability to produce healthy offspring." Alex Dominguez, 1999, Biology Is Destiny, At Least In Sex Appeal. The Sacramento Bee, June 24, 1999, page B8.
CALIFORNIA / CHICO WORDS: A "Story" about Chico in the year 2027 may be viewed by clicking here: ESSAY #2 at the end of this printed Guidebook; you may also wish to read ESSAY #3 concerning "Cancer" in the State of California.]
"If you want to inform yourself about the single most important factor influencing California's present and future, enter www.dof.ca.gov in your Internet browser and look at the state's newest compilation of popultation data. ... July [2002], California's population stood at 35.3 million, a yearly gain of 603,000 or 1.74 percent..... The 2001-02 growth consisted of 528,151 births--just over one a minute--offset by 232,790 deaths, but augmented by 307,640 immigrants.... California's population growth, about 1,650 people each day [~13.75/minute], is not occuring evenly in the state.... [stress added]." Dan Walters, 2003, State's Past, Present and Future Found in Population Figures. The Sacramento Bee, February 2, 2003, page A3.
THE POPULATION of the Chico area is 99,375. There are 66,800 individuals within the City Limits of Chico. (January 1, 2002 estimates by the California Department of Finance.) Anon. 2002,The Chico Enterprise-Record, June 29, 2002 Special Section, Discover: Your Complete Guide, page 10.
"We're still growing: Chico breaches 100,000 population" by Laura Urseny (Business Editor), The Chico Enterprise-Record (May 8, 2003), page 1: On January 1, 2002, the estimated "Chico urban area" population was 99,375 and on January 1, 2003 it was 100,500 (page 2).
FROM "The Official City of Chico Web Site" at http://www.chico.ca.us/ "The City of Chico was founded in 1860 by General John Bidwell, and became incorporated in 1872 with a population of approximately 1000 persons in an area of 6.6 square miles. By 2001, the City of Chico had grown to include a population of 64,581 persons in an area of 22 square miles [stress added]."
NOTE: According to The World Almanac and Book of Facts 2003 (page 366), the estimated population for California in 2001 was 34,501,130. It has been estimated that the population for California in the following years will be: 39,957,616 (in the year 2010), 45,448,627 (2020), and 58,731,006 (2040). (Chico Enterprise-Record, December 18, 1998, page 4A); "By 2040, the state [of California] will have 58.7 million residents, a 75 percent increase, according to Department of Finance projections. The population in some counties could more than triple [stress added]." (Chico Enterprise-Record, May 2, 1999, page 1B)
"I knew there was something special about Chico the minute I laid eyes on it, and not just because it is a standout among Central Valley cities. In city planner terms, Chico has 'a strong sense of place.' To me, it's enough to say that Chico has a 'there.' When you arrive here, you immediately sense that you have reached a desirable place. You want to get out of the car and walk around. And after doing that, you want to find a job, buy a house and live here the rest of your life. You can't say that about most California cities [stress added]." Steve Brown, 2001, But This Is Chico. Enterprise-Record, January 1, 2001, page 2A.
"In 1950, the population of Chico was 12,722. The population more than doubled by 1980, to 26,601. During the past two decades, those numbers have increased to 64,581 in the City limits, and approximately 95,000 in the Chico Urban Area. Projections provided by the Butte County Association of Governments (BCAG) lists the population [of the city of Chico] at 75,879 in the year 2010, 85,364 in 2015, 90,035 in 2020, and 108,039 in the year 2025 [stress added]." Anon., 2002, Celebrate the Building Industry! Special Section ("Industrial Barbecue 2002") of The Chico Enterprise-Record, June 18, 2002, page 3.
"California's population continues to grow by more than 500,000 people a year. Such growth brings a host of challenges--how to provide enough affordable housing, adequate transportation, schools and jobs. In order to address these challenges, local cities and governments should be encouraged to work together and create regional growth management policies [stress added]." Elizabeth Klementowski, 2002, Flawed solution to an imaginary problem. The San francisco Chronicle, June 18, 2002, page A19.
"...California is not done growing. Over the next 20 years, another 15 million people will be born in, or move to, the Golden State [which had an estimated March 2001 population of 33,871,648 residents] [stress added]." Robert W. Poole, 2001, The Wall Street Journal, August 29, 2001, page A14.
Saying California grows by one new person every minute, a major land developer is recommending significant state governments reforms to prevent California from becoming unlivable withing 20 to 40 years. Amid projections of 58 million residents by 2040.... [stress added]." The Sacramento Bee, October 5, 2002. Jim Wasserman, Rapid Growth Called a Threat; AND FROM The San Francisco Chronicle (October 6, 2002): "...predicts there will be 48 million people in California by the year 2025, up from about 34 million in 2000. By 2040, the number could rise to 58 million [stress added]." And check out http://www.census.gov/cgi-bin/popclock to see what it is now: it was printed in your Guidebook that on August 1, 2003, the population of the USA was 291,663,907. What is it when you read this page now?
On Changes in California: "Almost 70,000 acres of California's open space was devoured by a growing population lured to the state by its booming economy from 1996 to 1998, according to a state report released Wednesday [October 11, 2000]. The urban sprawl is driven by California's influx of roughly 700,000 people a year [stress added]." Open space continues vanish act in state. (Associated Press) The Sacramento Bee, October 12, 2000, page A3.
"About 90,000 acres of California farmland were lost to urbanization from 1998 to 2000, the largest move to urban acreage in the state in a decade [stress added]." Anon., 2003, Sprawl consumes 90,000 acreas of farms. The San Francisco Chronicle June 5, 2003, page A18.
On Sunday, June 24, 2001, an article appeared in The Sacramento Bee (Alvin D. Sokolow, How Much State Farmland Is Disappearing? pages L1 and L6) based on research from University of California, Davis, now provides the figure of "only" 49,700 acres of California farmland disappearing each year! Incidentally, the CSU, Chico campus (excluding the University farm, is approximately 119 acres (so approximately 417 Chico State campuses disappear every year in California!).
"For millions of Californians, housing is the cross they must bear for living here. There simply isn't enough of it. For nearly 20 years, California's home-building industry has lagged behind the state's population growth." Jim Wasserman, 2001, Experts Warn Housing Shortage Even Worse In Future. The San Francisco Chronicle, July 29, 2001, page A19.
CHICO: "The city's general plan targets an urban-area population of approximately 134,000 by the year 2012 [stress added]." Dan Nguyen-Tan, 2002, Growth: Land is our most valuable and limited resource. The Chico Enterprise-Record, February 26, 2002, Section AA, page 3AA. [NOTE: Urbanowicz would also add that time can also be considered to be the most valuable and limited resource.]
"Fortune continues to smile on this city at the dawn of the 23rd Century, Chico Grande, at 500,000 people, is the unofficial capital of Upper California [stress added!]" Steve Brown, 2001, In the year 2202, fortune continues to smile on this city. The Chico Enterprise-Record, December 31, 2001, page 3A.
QUESTIONS TO CONSIDER: What will the population of the USA or California or Chico be by 2042? Or 2022? or next year?! What is the "carrying capacity" of any given environment? What changes have to be made in any given environment? What will be the impact of an increasingly older American population on this country? On you?
NOTE: There are more than 6 billion people on the planet and population is increasing by approximately 78,000,000 people per year; given that 1 year = 365.25 days = 8,766 hours = 525,960 minutes, therefore 78,000,000/525,960 = means that the population of the planet is increasing by approximately 148 people a minute. For this 50 minute class, please note that this means that the world will have had a NET INCREASE (births-minus-deaths) of ~7,400 individuals (roughly speaking).
NOTE: "If we could shrink the Earth's population to a village of precisely 100 people, with all existing ratios [on the planet] remaining the same, it would look like this: 51 females, 49 males; 70 non-white, 30 white; 57 Asians, 21 Europeans, 14 from the Western Hemisphere, and 8 Africans; 70 non-Christians, 30 Christians. 50 percent of the wealth would be in the hands of six people. All six of those people would be from the United States. 80 would live in substandard housing. 70 would be illiterate. 50 would suffer from malnutrition. 1 would be near death, 1 near birth. 1 would be college educated. No one would own a computer." (Chico Enterprise-Record, June 19, 1999, page 3B.)
PLEASE NOTE: According to the U.S. Bureau of the Census, the resident population of the United States, projected to August 1, 2003, at 9:40:38am [Pacific Standard Time] was 291,663,907 [http://www.census.gov/cgi-bin/popclock]. This means there is one birth every 8 seconds, one death every 13 seconds, one international migrant (net) every 22 seconds, for a net gain of one person every 10 seconds.
AND INCIDENTALLY, a fascinating (and useful site) is http://www.xist.org/index.php [GeoHive: Global Statistics]. Have a look!
Thomas Robrt Malthus (1766-1834): "English economist [and cleric!]. His Essay on the Principle of Population 1798 (revised 1803) argued for population control, since populations increase in geometric ratio and food supply only in arithmetic ratio, and influenced Charles Darwin's thinking on natural selection as the driving force of evolution. Malthus saw war, famine, and disease as necessary checks on population growth" [stress added]." Sarah Jenkins Jones (Editor), 1996, Random House Webster's Dictionary of Scientists, page 317.
"In the complex history of modern biology, only Darwin's theory of evolution has so shocked the mind as to raise serious questions about man's place in the universe. Darwin forced men to consider that they are animals, and that the designs of creation are played out on a much wider stage than was imagined. From the point of view of the theory of evolution, mankind is only one species among thousands which have their place within the f