What Makes the Identity of a Scientific Method? A History of the “Structural and Analytical Typology” in the Growth of Evolutionary and Digital Archaeology in Southwestern Europe (1950s–2000s)
PLUTNIAK, Sébastien
Centre Émile Durkheim [CED]
Travaux et recherches archéologiques sur les cultures, les espaces et les sociétés [TRACES]
Centre Émile Durkheim [CED]
Travaux et recherches archéologiques sur les cultures, les espaces et les sociétés [TRACES]
PLUTNIAK, Sébastien
Centre Émile Durkheim [CED]
Travaux et recherches archéologiques sur les cultures, les espaces et les sociétés [TRACES]
< Réduire
Centre Émile Durkheim [CED]
Travaux et recherches archéologiques sur les cultures, les espaces et les sociétés [TRACES]
Langue
en
Article de revue
Ce document a été publié dans
Journal of Paleolithic Archaeology. 2022-12, vol. 5, n° 1, p. 10
Cham: Springer International Publishing
Résumé en anglais
Usual narratives among prehistoric archaeologists consider typological approaches as part of a past and outdated episode in the history of research, subsequently replaced by technological, functional, chemical, and cognitive ...Lire la suite >
Usual narratives among prehistoric archaeologists consider typological approaches as part of a past and outdated episode in the history of research, subsequently replaced by technological, functional, chemical, and cognitive approaches. From a historical and conceptual perspective, this paper addresses several limits of these narratives, which 1) assume a linear, exclusive, and additive conception of scientific change, neglecting the persistence of typological problems, 2) reduce collective developments to personal work (e.g., the "Bordes'" and "Laplace" methods in France), and 3) presuppose the coherence and identity of these "methods" over time. It explores the case of the "Structural and analytical typology" method, developed in France, Spain, and Italy from the 1950s to the 2000s by Georges Laplace and his collaborators for lithic implements. This paper 1) provides a detailed historical account of the evolving content of this collective endeavour over five decades, 2) it addresses the epistemological question of what makes the identity and unity of a scientific method, demonstrating that the core component of the "analytical typology" lies in its particular way to represent real-world phenomena through its notation system, and 3) it reveals how this little-known but significant episode of advances in the methods and theory of archaeology, contemporary but independent of the "New Archaeology" trend in Englishspeaking archaeology, was instrumental in the continuation of evolutionary perspectives in France and in the development of quantitative and formal methods in archaeology in southwestern Europe, foreseeing crucial knowledge representation issues raised today by digital methods in archaeology and data curation.< Réduire
Mots clés en anglais
history of archaeology
lithic typology
notation system
digital archaeology
evolutionary archaeology
Origine
Importé de hal