[With reference to the body anthropology: a human being]

A Paluch

Journal Article: Medycyna nowozytna: studia nad historia medycyny / Polska Akademia Nauk, Instytut Historii Nauki 02/1998; 5(2):5-10.

Abstract

What does a man consist of? - the query "as old as a world". Does he consist of soul and body being the separate independent entities, or is he a mixture of those elements constituting an inseparable whole? It is a question which scientists of various disciplines are still trying to answer. While belief that those two elements coexist separately was sufficient for dualists, the burden of constant search for the "liaison" between the spiritual and the corporeal lay on the monists. The intellectual change of modern and post-modern times inaugurated the change also in this respect. The anthropological controversy assumes different shapes now: man is seen monisticaly, as a whole, and new directions in seeing the world and cognition are being formed. Phenomenology as well as cultural anthropology has done a lot in this field. While studying human body it also studies a man as a whole (body - subject); human body changes as if inherently according to a biological order but it is also shaped by "history", i.e. events, society, learning, politics, culture. And in those contexts body is studied by anthropology - a new specialization emerges: anthropology of body.

Source: PubMed

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Keywords

biological order
 
constant search
 
contexts body
 
corporeal
 
cultural anthropology
 
different shapes
 
dualists
 
elements constituting
 
events
 
human body
 
human body changes
 
inseparable whole
 
monisticaly
 
new specialization
 
old
 
post-modern times
 
separate independent entities
 
two elements coexist
 
various disciplines
 
world"