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Archaeology vs Biology - What's the difference?

archaeology | biology |

As nouns the difference between archaeology and biology

is that archaeology is the study of the past by excavation and analysis of its material remains while biology is the study of all life or living matter.

archaeology

Alternative forms

* (Commonwealth) * archeology (primarily USA)

Noun

(-)
  • The study of the past by excavation and analysis of its material remains:
  • * 1997 : Chris Horrocks, Introducing Foucault , pages 36,{1} 63,{2} and 64{3} (Totem Books, Icon Books; ISBN 1840460865)
  • {1} He first presented a complementary thesis on the Enlightenment philosopher Immanuel Kant' (1724–1804), in which he used the term “' archaeology ” for the first time, and which indicated the period of history to which he was constantly to return.
    {2} The latent grid of knowledge which organizes every scientific discourse and defines what can or cannot be thought scientifically — the process of uncovering these levels Foucault calls 'archaeology' .
    {3}Archaeology'”, as the investigation of that which renders necessary a certain form of thought, implies an excavation of unconsciously organized sediments of thought. Unlike a '''history of ideas''', it doesn’t assume that knowledge accumulates towards any historical conclusion. '''Archaeology''' ignores individuals and their histories. It prefers to excavate '''impersonal''' structures of knowledge.
    '''Archaeology''' is a task that ''doesn’t'' consist of treating discourse as signs referring to a real content like madness. It treats discourses, such as medicine, as '
    practices
    that form the objects of which they speak.
    :
  • the actual excavation, examination, analysis and interpretation.
  • :
    The building's developers have asked for some archaeology to be undertakem.
    :
  • the actual remains together with their location in the stratigraphy.
  • :
    The archaeology will tell us which methods of burial were used by the Ancient Greeks.
    :
  • the academic subject; in the USA: one of the four sub-disciplines of anthropology.
  • :
    She studied archaeology at Edinburgh University.

    Derived terms

    * archaeologic * archaeological * archaeologist * dendroarchaeology * ethnoarchaeology * geoarchaeology * maritime archaeology * xenoarchaeology * zooarchaeology

    biology

    Noun

  • The study of all life or living matter.
  • * {{quote-magazine, date=2012-01
  • , author=Robert M. Pringle , title=How to Be Manipulative , volume=100, issue=1, page=31 , magazine= citation , passage=As in much of biology , the most satisfying truths in ecology derive from manipulative experimentation. Tinker with nature and quantify how it responds.}}
  • The living organisms of a particular region.
  • * '>citation
  • The structure, function, and behavior of an organism or type of organism.
  • the biology of the whale

    Synonyms

    * , life science, life sciences

    Meronyms

    * See also

    Derived terms

    * actinobiology * aerobiology * agrobiology * astrobiology * chemical biology * chronobiology * cryobiology * developmental biology * electrobiology * evolutionary biology * evolutionary developmental biology * exobiology * forensic biology * geobiology * geomicrobiology * glycobiology * hydrobiology * immunobiology * macrobiology * marine biology * microbiology * molecular biology * neurobiology * nonbiology * palaeobiology * paleobiology * pathobiology * photobiology * phytobiology * psychobiology * radiation biology * radiobiology * sociobiology * soil microbiology * space biology * structural biology * synthetic biology * synthetic-biology * systems biology * xenobiology

    See also

    *