Cultural anthropology is defined as a field of anthropology that deals with human culture, especially in the fields of social structure, language, law, politics, religion, magic, art and technology ("Definite Anthropology"). In this article, I will talk about the lives of two very prominent anthropologists. The first one was Louis Henry Morgan who was active in the latter half of the 19th century, and the second one was a controversial anthropologist Napoleon Churn who began researching in the 1960s. Even if the time difference is large, there is much overlap between their ideology and theory.
The core of this concept is Napoleon Shannon, sometimes called the "most controversial anthropologist" in the United States. In 1968, when he announced the observations of Venezuela and Brazilian Yanomami, Channion called them "fiercely" and caused a disturbance. They are in a state of "chronic war". He insists that the man killed by Yanomami has more wives and hence has more children: evidence of violent behavior. This represents a major difference in anthropological agreement. Anthropologists have criticized almost all aspects of Chagnon's work, from his way to his conclusion. But for social biologists, this is a typical example of supporting their theory.
The worshiper calls him a pioneer of scientific anthropology. Chagnon is known as Chagnon's latest book "Noble Savages: My Life in Two Dangerous Tribes" - Yanomamö and anthropologist, before the scientific memoirs, "the most controversial anthropologist" in the United States It is. Born in Port Austin, Michigan, Chagnon is the second child of twelve children. After graduating from university, I entered the University of Michigan, I got a bachelor's degree in 1961 and a master's degree in 1963. Under the guidance of Leslie White in 1966. According to a field survey of 17 months starting in 1964, Chagnon's paper examines the relationship between relatives and social organizations in the village of Yanomamö.
A friend invited Chagnon. He was still a freshman and attended a recruitment recital at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor. Under the influence of the university's reputation, he applied for transfer and was surprised that he entered during the second grade. "I am very excited!" Chagnon said. "It is like hitting the lottery where I am from." He attended the physics course of Professor Donald Glaser of the Nobel Prize winner of 1960, and the ambulance driver and the dorm's father support himself I found. Chagnon was also asked to take classes at other departments of the College of Liberal Arts, Science and Arts. His only course of his kind in the first semester of Michigan province was the introduction to cultural anthropology taught by famous cultural anthropologist Elman Service. The second course of Professor Leslie White, also famous, reinforces the charm of Chagnon. "After the White's second speech, I was fascinated," he said.