Edward Burnett Tylor’s scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


Primitive Culture: Researches into the Development of Mythology, Philosophy, Religion, Art, and Custom
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January 2010

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Edward Burnett Tylor

Edward Burnett Tylor (1832-1917) was an English anthropologist who is widely considered the founder of anthropology as a scientific discipline. He was the first Professor of Anthropology at the University of Oxford from 1896 to 1909, and developed a broad definition of culture which is still used by scholars. First published in 1871, this classic work explains Tylor's idea of cultural evolution in relation to anthropology, a social theory which states that human cultures invariably change over time to become more complex. Unlike his contemporaries, Tylor did not link biological evolution to cultural evolution, asserting that all human minds are the same irrespective of a society's state of evolution. His book was extremely influential in popularising the study of anthropology and establishing cultural evolution as the main theoretical framework followed by anthropologists in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Volume 2 contains Tylor's interpretation of animism in society.

Citations (1)


... Studying culture from an evolutionary perspective is an aim as old as anthropology itself. The first European science of culture to go by the name sought to explain the origin and evolution of civilization in deterministic, naturalistic, and nomothetic terms (Tylor, 1865(Tylor, , 1920(Tylor, [1871). Its author, Edward B. Tylor, conceptualized culture as a universal process of rationalizing human thought and action, which progressed through three stages: from savagery to barbarism to civilization (Tylor, 1920(Tylor, [1871; Stocking, 1965Stocking, , 1968Stocking, , 1987. ...

Reference:

Historicizing the liberal antiracism of Cultural Evolution
Primitive Culture: Researches into the Development of Mythology, Philosophy, Religion, Art, and Custom
  • Citing Book
  • January 2010