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The concept
Epistemics refers to how knowledge is acquired, articulated and conveyed.
In the case of archaeology, it refers to the way in which the data extracted from the soil become part of a logically coherent system. We may refer to this as a process of “grammaticalization”. In and of itself, the physical record is inert and opaque, a mass of bits and pieces that do not emerge from the ground in any meaningful configuration. They become properly “known” when they are inserted into a grammatical system.
Since, unlike a language, the archaeological record is not a coherent whole, an archaeological grammar must deal with the processes through which the data are gathered and “known.” They will be briefly described below.
In the section that follows, I will discuss some of the basic principles that inform epistemic analysis as it refers to archaeology.
Back to top: Epistemics
Synopsis
The chart displays the relevant portion of the chart in the Overview, with the addition of titles for the three columns to the right.
The primary categories are those that correspond to the three main aspects of epistemics:
We will now look at the other three sub-categories of process, context and method. |
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Three venues: process, context, method
Archaeological data require a complex set of processes. Through these processes, data acquire their full status as knowable data. These processes deal each with a correlative and distinct context and method.
The notion of context refers to the setting in which the data are seen, originally in the ground (the matrix) and then in their identity independent from the excavation moment.
The “method” is the actual procedure used in defining the data precisely as grammatically identifiable entities.
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The major epistemic processes
- Disentangling. – The matrix of the soil must be first confronted and its contents must be extracted through a documentary process (stratigraphic analysis) that accounts for all the data so retrieved.
- Structuring. – The data can then be structured into assemblages that are based on formal coccurrences of patterns (typology) and on pertinent information from other contexts (integrative).
- Re-structuring. – A unique aspect of archaeological publishing is the need to preserve selectyed portions of the physical record (conservation) and to make it accessible (presentation).
- Re-configuring. – Even the standard “publication” process requires a special approach that may make the record available in its globality (the digital global record) in addition to the printed venue which is by necessity highly selective.
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Theory and its implementation
The theoretical framework I am describing is closely reflected in the digital unit books. The two images on the right show how the unit books mirror the theoretical scheme of the Grammar:
In other words,
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