Every sherd is sacred: Compulsive hoarding in archaeology

Allbwn ymchwil: Pennod mewn Llyfr/Adroddiad/Trafodion CynhadleddPennodadolygiad gan gymheiriaid

StandardStandard

Every sherd is sacred: Compulsive hoarding in archaeology. / Karl, Raimund.
Managing the Archaeological Heritage: Public archaeology in Europe. gol. / Ghattas J. Sayej; Donald Henson; Yvonne F. Williumsen. Kristiansand: Vest-Agder-Museet, 2015. t. 24-37 3.

Allbwn ymchwil: Pennod mewn Llyfr/Adroddiad/Trafodion CynhadleddPennodadolygiad gan gymheiriaid

HarvardHarvard

Karl, R 2015, Every sherd is sacred: Compulsive hoarding in archaeology. yn GJ Sayej, D Henson & YF Williumsen (gol.), Managing the Archaeological Heritage: Public archaeology in Europe., 3, Vest-Agder-Museet, Kristiansand, tt. 24-37.

APA

Karl, R. (2015). Every sherd is sacred: Compulsive hoarding in archaeology. Yn G. J. Sayej, D. Henson, & Y. F. Williumsen (Gol.), Managing the Archaeological Heritage: Public archaeology in Europe (tt. 24-37). Erthygl 3 Vest-Agder-Museet.

CBE

Karl R. 2015. Every sherd is sacred: Compulsive hoarding in archaeology. Sayej GJ, Henson D, Williumsen YF, golygyddion. Yn Managing the Archaeological Heritage: Public archaeology in Europe. Kristiansand: Vest-Agder-Museet. tt. 24-37.

MLA

Karl, Raimund "Every sherd is sacred: Compulsive hoarding in archaeology"., Sayej, Ghattas J. Henson, Donald Williumsen, Yvonne F. (golygyddion). Managing the Archaeological Heritage: Public archaeology in Europe. Kristiansand: Vest-Agder-Museet. 2015, 24-37.

VancouverVancouver

Karl R. Every sherd is sacred: Compulsive hoarding in archaeology. Yn Sayej GJ, Henson D, Williumsen YF, golygyddion, Managing the Archaeological Heritage: Public archaeology in Europe. Kristiansand: Vest-Agder-Museet. 2015. t. 24-37. 3

Author

Karl, Raimund. / Every sherd is sacred : Compulsive hoarding in archaeology. Managing the Archaeological Heritage: Public archaeology in Europe. Gol. / Ghattas J. Sayej ; Donald Henson ; Yvonne F. Williumsen. Kristiansand : Vest-Agder-Museet, 2015. tt. 24-37

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Every sherd is sacred

T2 - Compulsive hoarding in archaeology

AU - Karl, Raimund

PY - 2015/12/15

Y1 - 2015/12/15

N2 - Since the beginnings of our subject in German countries in the late 19th century, a mostly unreflected, firmly positivist epistemology has been the foundation of our practice. Established by ‘fathers’ of modern archaeology like Virchow and Hoernes, we believe that “...beginning and progress...” in archaeology lie in “... the observation of plain fact, in the stringing together of individual, of themselves unremarkable observations to incontrovertible knowledge...” (Hoernes 1892, 43). Virchow (quoted in Hoernes 1892, 70) hoped that the anthropological disciplines would progress “...by purely inductive means...” in the future. One of the necessary (epistemo-)logical preconditions for the possibility to arrive at proof positive by inductive reasoning is the completeness of observations. And since it has become disciplinary dogma that only inductive reasoning based on correct and complete observations of archaeology can create reliable, i.e. ‘true’, knowledge about archaeological things (and people), a particular relationship of the discipline with these things necessarily follows: every archaeological object is an infinitely valuable treasure, is sacrosanct, must be conserved forever. Only this can guarantee that our observations remain repeatable and thus allow our discipline to progress by no other than inductive means. Industrial hoarding thus is a necessary consequence of our epistemological approach.

AB - Since the beginnings of our subject in German countries in the late 19th century, a mostly unreflected, firmly positivist epistemology has been the foundation of our practice. Established by ‘fathers’ of modern archaeology like Virchow and Hoernes, we believe that “...beginning and progress...” in archaeology lie in “... the observation of plain fact, in the stringing together of individual, of themselves unremarkable observations to incontrovertible knowledge...” (Hoernes 1892, 43). Virchow (quoted in Hoernes 1892, 70) hoped that the anthropological disciplines would progress “...by purely inductive means...” in the future. One of the necessary (epistemo-)logical preconditions for the possibility to arrive at proof positive by inductive reasoning is the completeness of observations. And since it has become disciplinary dogma that only inductive reasoning based on correct and complete observations of archaeology can create reliable, i.e. ‘true’, knowledge about archaeological things (and people), a particular relationship of the discipline with these things necessarily follows: every archaeological object is an infinitely valuable treasure, is sacrosanct, must be conserved forever. Only this can guarantee that our observations remain repeatable and thus allow our discipline to progress by no other than inductive means. Industrial hoarding thus is a necessary consequence of our epistemological approach.

KW - German archaeology

KW - positivism

KW - professional archaeological collections

KW - hoarding disorder

M3 - Chapter

SN - 9788291178318

SP - 24

EP - 37

BT - Managing the Archaeological Heritage

A2 - Sayej, Ghattas J.

A2 - Henson, Donald

A2 - Williumsen, Yvonne F.

PB - Vest-Agder-Museet

CY - Kristiansand

ER -