12th February 2007, 05:52 PM
Hi G,
do you not think that that is perhaps the way we are heading anyway, within what some people have come to call the 'commercial paradigm'? In some cases the 'imagined individual' is no more than a vehicle for dissemination and explanation.
Relativism is applicable at a cognotive or psychological level, i.e. from the individual perspective. It exists, clearly, and should be acknowledged, but how the hell do you realise it within the archaeological record, or assimilate interpretations with the data? Is it not a fascination of abstract theorisers in ivory towers? [ouch, hehe - just asking! ]
do you not think that that is perhaps the way we are heading anyway, within what some people have come to call the 'commercial paradigm'? In some cases the 'imagined individual' is no more than a vehicle for dissemination and explanation.
Relativism is applicable at a cognotive or psychological level, i.e. from the individual perspective. It exists, clearly, and should be acknowledged, but how the hell do you realise it within the archaeological record, or assimilate interpretations with the data? Is it not a fascination of abstract theorisers in ivory towers? [ouch, hehe - just asking! ]