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The Anthropology of Moralities

, 2022
Acknowledgements Chapter 1. Introduction: Why There Should Be an Anthropology of Moralities Monica Heintz Chapter 2. Norm and Spontaneity: Elicitation with Moral Dilemma Scenarios Thomas Widlok Chapter 3.
Monica Heintz
semanticscholar   +1 more source

The Anthropology of Being Haunted: On the Emergence of an Anthropological Hauntology

Annual Review of Anthropology, 2022
Since the appearance of Derrida's Specters of Marx: The State of the Debt, the Work of Mourning and the New International in 1994, there has been an outpouring of writing in cultural studies around the themes of hauntology and spectralities. This article
B. Good, Andrea Chiovenda, S. Rahimi
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Investigating Cultural Alignment of Large Language Models

Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics
The intricate relationship between language and culture has long been a subject of exploration within the realm of linguistic anthropology. Large Language Models (LLMs), promoted as repositories of collective human knowledge, raise a pivotal question: do
Badr AlKhamissi   +3 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Survey of Cultural Awareness in Language Models: Text and Beyond

arXiv.org
Large-scale deployment of large language models (LLMs) in various applications, such as chatbots and virtual assistants, requires LLMs to be culturally sensitive to the user to ensure inclusivity.
S. Pawar   +9 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Soylent Is People, and WEIRD Is White: Biological Anthropology, Whiteness, and the Limits of the WEIRD

Annual Review of Anthropology, 2019
WEIRD populations, or those categorized as Western, educated, industrialized, rich, and democratic, are sampled in the majority of quantitative human subjects research.
K. Clancy, Jenny L. Davis
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Biological anthropology's critical engagement with genomics, evolution, race/racism, and ourselves: Opportunities and challenges to making a difference in the academy and the world.

American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 2020
Biological anthropology can, and should, matter in the Anthropocene. Biological anthropologists are interested in human biology and the human experience in a broader ecological, evolutionary, and phylogenetic context. We are interested in the material of
A. Fuentes
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Why evolutionary biology needs anthropology: Evaluating core assumptions of the extended evolutionary synthesis

Evolutionary Anthropology (print), 2018
Anthropologists have a long history of applying concepts from evolutionary biology to cultural evolution. Evolutionary biologists, however, have been slow to turn to anthropology for insights about evolution.
M. Zeder
semanticscholar   +1 more source

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