I Identify as a Pratt & Whitney J58 JT11D-20 equipped, bipedal carbon based groundframe designed for multipurpose roles within terrestrial environments.
Thanks for reply, I hear you in theory; however your take is 'avoiding' my point in reality.
You mean, Geo-archaeologist rather than a Geographer? Cross disciplinary collab occurs often, yet is assymetrically biased towards archaeology. Archaeologists adopt these geographic methods/tools...independently as research method additions to their own research methods, and core training.
This is not symmetric due to core archaeological field study is overseen by professional qualifications and standards requiring a grad degree + supervised field experience.
I agree that Geographers can and have trained in these methods/qualifications and collaborate interdisciplinarily as Geoarchaeologists/ specialists. however, as you overlooked; leading and directing primary archaeology work requires satisfying archaeology field-specific cert's. RPA is voluntary but necessary for career Geoarchaeology to avoid complications with Cultural Resource Management as you are aware.
I am not piling on intentionally, yet some domains are more protected/gatekept than others. It's "Standard-operating-procedure" one direction, and "Domain-Sprawl" at best the other direction. Evidently, expertise can safeguard heritage and lead to complacency in interdisciplinary narratives. So, that said, I do support interdisciplinary cross-training if the narrative is shared interdisciplinarily. Unfortunately however, it currently is anything but. I think you know very well that some findings relating to Handedness are able to rock the core of Academia.
GIS/ geospatial tools are just tools, as are the tools of Archaeology. You don't need to hire a handyman to build a chicken coop, unless it's a prehistoric chicken coop, then you'd need to call an archaeologist apparently and get permission/ SOI supervision from 3 governmental agencies and CRM.
@TheJamsheed@AyTone_ You are in for a ride lol. I am rereading Master & His Emissary again actually. My goodness the guy worked so hard to make that book.
@TheJamsheed@AyTone_ Did you know that anger and negative emotion maps to the left hemisphere of the brain, and is one of the most strongly lateralized human emotions (Mcgilchrist).
If you're very concerned about extroardinary wealth leading to concentration of power in government, may I suggest a system of horizontal and vertical checks and balances, restricted to limited and enumerated powers?
Thanks for reply, I hear you in theory; however your take is 'avoiding' my point in reality.
You mean, Geo-archaeologist rather than a Geographer? Cross disciplinary collab occurs often, yet is assymetrically biased towards archaeology. Archaeologists adopt these geographic methods/tools...independently as research method additions to their own research methods, and core training.
This is not symmetric due to core archaeological field study is overseen by professional qualifications and standards requiring a grad degree + supervised field experience.
I agree that Geographers can and have trained in these methods/qualifications and collaborate interdisciplinarily as Geoarchaeologists/ specialists. however, as you overlooked; leading and directing primary archaeology work requires satisfying archaeology field-specific cert's. RPA is voluntary but necessary for career Geoarchaeology to avoid complications with Cultural Resource Management as you are aware.
I am not piling on intentionally, yet some domains are more protected/gatekept than others. It's "Standard-operating-procedure" one direction, and "Domain-Sprawl" at best the other direction. Evidently, expertise can safeguard heritage and lead to complacency in interdisciplinary narratives. So, that said, I do support interdisciplinary cross-training if the narrative is shared interdisciplinarily. Unfortunately however, it currently is anything but. I think you know very well that some findings relating to Handedness are able to rock the core of Academia.
GIS/ geospatial tools are just tools, as are the tools of Archaeology. You don't need to hire a handyman to build a chicken coop, unless it's a prehistoric chicken coop, then you'd need to call an archaeologist apparently and get permission/ SOI supervision from 3 governmental agencies and CRM.
Lol thanks, though even among lefties, very few actually use a mouse on the Left because of primary schools. Schools openly discriminate on the basis of handedness in this regard because left handed people have no civil rights lol. I dont blame you for designing for the overwhelming majority. I call left handed people who use the mouse on the right, "Conformist Lefties".
Lol thanks, though even among lefties, very few actually use a mouse on the Left because of primary schools. Schools openly discriminate on the basis of handedness in this regard because left handed people have no civil rights lol. I dont blame you for designing for the overwhelming majority. I call left handed people who use the mouse on the right, "Conformist Lefties".
That is cool!
That would actually be a good father's day gift for a lefty. Though, the author has his own interpretations on the subject and started kinda rambling about the left hand path for a chapter. I think he has TDS too but I dont really know. Its just an entry into the subject as it lands on the conclusion about Milton's "A Preface to Paradise Lost" which is very important to know regarding this subject and is sourced from Mcmanus' book on handedness.
If you want to get started on the topic of handedness, the book "A Left Hand Turn Around the World: Chasing the Mystery and Meaning of All Things Southpaw" by David Wolman does a good job of introducing Chris Mcmanus' points to the reader. Although he goes into his own interpretations at times and lost my interest in others. I like the textbooks more.
That is actually really uncommon, technically that is called mixed handed. if you can use a computer mouse with either hand equally easily then you are ambidextrous, which is what I do. The fact that you have a parent that is a southpaw increases the odds of being lefty dramatically. True ambidexterity is very rare (1/100) and I have never met someone more ambidextrous than I am, yet i still consider myself Left-handed because its hard to objectively classify.
That said, the topic of human laterality is easily one of the most interesting and pertinant subjects of our time, in addition to being largely underrated and underappreciated. The fact is that it comes down to Culture as indicated by laterality researchers such as Chris Mcmanus. It is very challenging to summarize this corpus of esoteric knowledge into a quick explanation of why this matters. But I will say, human laterality and the bihemispheric brain mainly comes down to language. interestingly language is inextricably linked to Religion (R. Bellah). Then, we can also jump to Ian Mcgilchrist's "Master and His emissary", which further outlines social & cultural implications of the divided brain by referencing the work of Chris Mcmanus.
This information is only the surface of the rabbit hole, once you get your hands on these books, you will see things much differently.
@TheJamsheed@Awk20000 lol. self reporting bias? most right handed people claim to be ambidextrous. Mixed handed and ambidextrous are 2 different things. Have you read about the handedness rabbit hole?