考古学对当代问题的独特贡献——史前社会研究新进展
Archaeology’s Unique Contribution to Contemporary Problems—Study Progress of Prehistoric Society
DOI: 10.12677/ASS.2023.125319, PDF,    科研立项经费支持
作者: 曲宇蒙:中国人民大学历史学院,北京
关键词: 考古学当代新进展Archaeology Contemporary New Progress
摘要: 作为一门研究过去的学科,近年来越来越多的考古学研究也开始涉及当代问题。考古学家对过去社会的阐释也逐渐进入到现代政治、经济、社会和生态环境的讨论当中。这些新进展的实现,一方面得益于近几十年来考古学数据的系统收集,另一方面也得益于交叉学科方法的不断实践应用。有鉴于此,本文选取了当今全球面临的四个重要问题和挑战,通过具体案例展示了考古学对于理解当代社会的贡献:1) 不平等问题,尤其是贫富分化的加剧;2) 市场的繁荣和抑制;3) 气候变化和人类社会应对;4) 社会系统的互动、预测和治理。这些成果表明,从考古证据中获得的经验知识不仅增加了我们对历史进程的了解,还使我们能够从更长时段的观察比较中回应关乎人类未来和命运的重要争论。
Abstract: As a realm that studies the past, archaeology has increasingly expanded its scope to address con-temporary issues in recent years. Archeological interpretation of past societies is increasingly into discussions of modern politics, economics, society, and ecological environments. These new developments have been facilitated by the systematic collection of archaeological data over the past few decades, as well as the continuous application of interdisciplinary methods. Accordingly, this paper selects four important global issues and challenges facing the world today and demonstrates the contribution of archaeology to understanding contemporary society through specific examples: 1) Inequality, especially the increasing gap between rich and poor; 2) The boom and bust of markets; 3) Climate change and human society’s response; 4) Interaction, prediction, and governance of social systems. These achievements show that experiential knowledge gained from archaeological evidence not only increases our understanding of historical processes, but also enables us to respond to important debates concerning the future and fate of humanity through longer-term observational comparisons.
文章引用:曲宇蒙. 考古学对当代问题的独特贡献——史前社会研究新进展[J]. 社会科学前沿, 2023, 12(5): 2355-2363. https://doi.org/10.12677/ASS.2023.125319

参考文献

[1] Smith, M.E., Feinman, G.M., Drennan, R.D., et al. (2012) Archaeology as a Social Science. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 109, 7617-7621. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
[2] Kintigh, K.W., Altschul, J.H., Beaudry, M.C., et al. (2014) Grand Challenges for Archaeology. American Antiquity, 79, 5-24.
[3] 吕学明, 熊增珑, 郭明, 等. 2014年牛河梁遗址系统性区域考古调查研究[J]. 华夏考古, 2015(3): 3-8.
[4] 吕学明, 柯睿思, 周南, 等. 辽宁大凌河上游流域考古调查简报[J]. 考古, 2010(5): 24-35.
[5] 赤峰中美联合考古研究项目. 内蒙古东部(赤峰)区域考古调查阶段性报告[R]. 北京: 科学出版社, 2003.
[6] Drennan, R.D., Peterson, C.E., Lu, X. and Li, T. (2017) Hongshan Households and Communities in Neolithic Northeastern China. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology, 47, 50-71. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef
[7] Smith, M.E., Dennehy, T., Kamp-Whittaker, A., Colon, E. and Harkness, R. (2014) Quantitative Measures of Wealth Inequality in Ancient Central Mexican Communities. Advances in Archaeological Practice, 2, 311-323. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef
[8] Dennehy, T.J., Stanley, B.W. and Smith, M.E. (2016) Social Inequality and Access to Services in Premodern Cities. Archeological Papers of the American Anthropological Association, 27, 143-160. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef
[9] Thompson, A.E., Feinman, G.M. and Prufer, K.M. (2021) Assessing Classic Maya Multi-Scalar Household Inequality in Southern Belize. PLOS ONE, 16, e0248169. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef
[10] Thompson, A.E., Feinman, G.M., Lemly, M. and Prufer, K.M. (2021) Inequality, Networks and the Financing of Classic Maya Political Power. Journal of Archaeological Science, 133, Article ID: 105441. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef
[11] Robinson, J. (1972) The Second Crisis of Economic Theory. The American Economic Review, 62, 1-10.
[12] Polanyi, K. (1947) Our Obselete Market Economy: Civilization Must Find a New Thought Pattern. Commentary, 4, 109.
[13] Polanyi, K. (2018) The Economy as Instituted Process. In: Granovetter, M., Ed., The Sociology of Economic Life, Routledge, New York, 3-21. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef
[14] Hirth, K. (2009) Craft Production in a Central Mexican Marketplace. Ancient Mesoamerica, 20, 89-102. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef
[15] Chase, D.Z. and Chase, A.F. (2014) Ancient Maya Markets and the Economic Integration of Caracol, Belize. Ancient Mesoamerica, 25, 239-250. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef
[16] Masson, M.A. and Freidel, D.A. (2012) An Argument for Classic Era Maya Market Exchange. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology, 31, 455-484. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef
[17] Feinman, G.M. and Nicholas, L.M. (2012) The Late Prehispanic Economy of the Valley of Oaxaca, Mexico: Weaving Threads from Data, Theory and Subsequent History. In: Political Economy, Neoliberalism and the Prehistoric Economies of Latin America, Vol. 32, Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Bingley, 225-258. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef
[18] Earle, T. and Smith, M. (2011) Household Economies under the Aztec and Inka Empires: A Comparison. In: Smith, M.E., Ed., The Comparative Archaeology of Complex Societies, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 238-284. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef
[19] Ortman, S.G., Davis, K.E., Lobo, J., et al. (2016) Settlement Scaling and Economic Change in the Central Andes. Journal of Archaeological Science, 73, 94-106. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef
[20] Earle, T. (1994) Wealth Finance in the Inka Empire: Evidence from the Calchaqui Valley, Argentina. American Antiquity, 59, 443-460. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef
[21] Willmes, C., Niedziółka, K., Serbe, B., et al. (2020) State of the Art in Paleoenvironment Mapping for Modeling Applications in Archeology—Summary, Conclusions and Future Directions from the PaleoMaps Workshop. Quaternary, 3, Article 13. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef
[22] Rick, T.C. and Sandweiss, D.H. (2020) Archaeology, Climate and Global Change in the Age of Humans. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 117, 8250-8253. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
[23] Preston, G.W., Parker, A.G., Walkington, H., Leng, M.J. and Hodson, M.J. (2012) From Nomadic Herder-Hunters to Sedentary Farmers: The Relationship between Climate Change and Ancient Subsistence Strategies in South-Eastern Arabia. Journal of Arid Environments, 86, 122-130. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef
[24] Petraglia, M.D., Groucutt, H.S., Guagnin, M., et al. (2020) Human Responses to Climate and Ecosystem Change in Ancient Arabia. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 117, 8263-8270. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
[25] Cooper, J. and Duncan, L. (2016) Applied Archaeology in the Americas: Evaluating Archaeological Solutions to the Impacts of Global Environmental Change. In: Isendahl, C. and Stump, D., Eds., The Oxford Handbook of Historical Ecology and Applied Archaeology, Oxford Academic, Oxford, 9-14. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef
[26] Cooper, J. (2013) The Climatic Context for Pre-Columbian Archaeology in the Caribbean. In: Isendahl, C. and Stump, D., Eds., The Oxford Handbook of Caribbean Archaeology, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 47-60. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef
[27] Cooper, J. and Peros, M. (2010) The Archaeology of Climate Change in the Caribbean. Journal of Archaeological Science, 37, 1226-1232. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef
[28] Izdebski, A., Holmgren, K., Weiberg, E., et al. (2016) Realising Consilience: How Better Communication between Archaeologists, Historians and Natural Scientists Can Transform the Study of Past Climate Change in the Mediterranean. Quaternary Science Reviews, 136, 5-22. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef
[29] Izdebski, A., Pickett, J., Roberts, N., et al. (2016) The Environmental, Archaeological and Historical Evidence for Regional Climatic Changes and Their Societal Impacts in the Eastern Mediterranean in Late Antiquity. Quaternary Science Reviews, 136, 189-208. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef
[30] Macy, M.W. and Willer, R. (2002) From Factors to Actors: Computational Sociology and Agent-Based Modeling. Annual Review of Sociology, 28, 143-166. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef
[31] Bonabeau, E. (2002) Agent-Based Modeling: Methods and Techniques for Simulating Human Systems. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 99, 7280-7287. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
[32] Cegielski, W.H. and Rogers, J.D. (2016) Rethinking the Role of Agent-Based Modeling in Archaeology. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology, 41, 283-298. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef
[33] Swedlund, A.C., Sattenspiel, L., Warren, A.L. and Gumerman, G.J. (2015) Modeling Archaeology: Origins of the Artificial Anasazi Project and Beyond. In: Wurzer, G., Kowarik, K. and Reschreiter, H., Eds., Agent-Based Modeling and Simulation in Archaeology, Advances in Geographic Information Science, Springer, Cham, 37-50. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef
[34] Dean, J.S., Gumerman, G.J., Epstein, J.M., et al. (2000) Understanding Anasazi Culture Change through Agent-Based Modeling. In: Kohler, T.A. and Gumerman, G.J., Eds., Dynamics in Human and Primate Societies: Agent-Based Modeling of Social and Spatial Processes, Oxford Academic, Oxford, 179-205. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef
[35] Janssen, M.A. (2009) Understanding Artificial Anasazi. Journal of Artificial Societies and Social Simulation, 12, 1-13.
[36] Kohler, T.A, Bocinsky, R.K., Cockburn, D., et al. (2012) Modelling Prehispanic Pueblo Societies in Their Ecosystems. Ecological Modelling, 241, 30-41. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef
[37] Kohler, T.A., Cockburn, D., Hooper, P.L., et al. (2012) The Coevolution of Group Size and Leadership: An Agent-Based Public Goods Model for Prehispanic Pueblo Societies. Advances in Complex Systems, 15, Article ID: 1150007. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef
[38] Wilkinson, T.J., Christiansen J.H., Ur, J., et al. (2007) Urbanization within a Dynamic Environment: Modeling Bronze Age Communities in Upper Mesopotamia. American Anthropologist, 109, 52-68. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef
[39] Rouse, L.M. and Weeks, L. (2011) Specialization and Social Inequality in Bronze Age SE Arabia: Analyzing the Development of Production Strategies and Economic Networks Using Agent-Based Modeling. Journal of Archaeological Science, 38, 1583-1590. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef