Article de revue: Clé de citation BibTeX:  Medin2007a
Medin, D. L., Ross, N. O., Cox, D., & Atran, S. (2007). Why folkbiology matters: Resource conflit despite shared goals and knowledge. Human Ecology, 35, pp. 315–329.
Ajoutée par: Lynda Taabane 2007-12-20 17:17:10
 B  
Catégories: Full text, General, Raisonnement inductif, Représentations naives
Auteurs: Atran, Cox, Medin, Ross
Collection: Human Ecology

Nombre de vues:  307
Popularité:  27.88%

 
Résumé
Abstract There is a continuing controversy over Native
American fishing and hunting rights. We show that Native
American (Menominee) and European American fish
experts have a common knowledge base and share values
and attitudes associated with fishing practices (though
organized around different ethical principles). Nonetheless,
perceived group differences are dramatic (especially European
American perceptions of Native Americans). Cultural
differences in models of nature and associated inference
processes appear to mediate these stereotypes and may hold
the key to reducing intergroup conflict over resources.
Key words Folkbiology . inductive reasoning .
cultural conflict . resource distribution . Menominee
Ajoutée par: Lynda Taabane

 
Idées
pdf dispo
Ajoutée par: Lynda Taabane
 

 
wikindx  v3.8.2 ©2007     |     Total Resources:  1609     |     Database queries:  30     |     Script execution:  1.98866 secs