12th October 2011, 08:25 AM
"Is archaeology a science"
To my mind we are subjective artists who create from raw materials a story, though often we use science to support the image from the past with a 'scientific steel framework'. I will confess however that I am an annoying processionalist - in that I try not to do anything other than record what is there as accurately as possible. Is that science? Dino is right, in that one persons distinct line is another's dotted line.
Can Science force repeatable activities? is there a way to re-examine a feature that has been dug away?
hhhhhmmmmmmmmmmm :face-huh:
Quote:Archaeology uses scientific methods, but by no means in it's own right would I consider it a science. The problem for me lays in reconstructing a testable hypothesis. As we all know, how do you recreate an excavation where it can independently be verified by our colleagues?
Quote:An observation by a single person is merely a personal opinion, not science - pretty much all archaeological recording comes under that heading, where to draw that boundary between layers on a section drawing, where to measure the width of the pit...as Jack well knows I've long since leart to go back to the drawings for dimensions, it's scary how often and how much those written on the context sheets differ....almost all archaeology is subjective rather than objective, would be nice if it was the other way around, then we might just get taken more seriously by other 'scientists'?
To my mind we are subjective artists who create from raw materials a story, though often we use science to support the image from the past with a 'scientific steel framework'. I will confess however that I am an annoying processionalist - in that I try not to do anything other than record what is there as accurately as possible. Is that science? Dino is right, in that one persons distinct line is another's dotted line.
Can Science force repeatable activities? is there a way to re-examine a feature that has been dug away?
hhhhhmmmmmmmmmmm :face-huh: