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Two minds

Two minds

Ryan Schram
ANTH 2700: Key debates in anthropology
ryan.schram@sydney.edu.au
Social Sciences Building 410 (A02)
Week of February 24, 2025 (Week 1)

Slides available at http://anthro.rschram.org/2700/2025/1

Welcome to the great conversation

Hello and welcome to ANTH 2700: Key debates in anthropology

What kind of a class is ANTH 2700?

There are different kinds of required or “core” classes you take at a university:

ANTH 2700 does not belong to any of these types of classes.

It has elements of all three, but it has a different aim and purpose.

This class aims

The weekly online check-in for class

For the first time ever, I will be tracking who comes to lecture.

Attendance is not part of your grade in this class. You don’t need to make up an absence if you miss a class, and you are not “required” to come to class any more than you are already required to attend classes.

We will use a QR code on the Student Relationship Engagement System (SRES) so that everyone can check in and say how they are doing.

What does anthropology mean to you?

Let’s talk. Get up and look around. Greet the people in the class. Say hi, and ask each other what anthropology means to you.

Use this Mentimeter page to share your ideas: https://www.menti.com/alxjqra569jw.

You can also go to https://menti.com and type in code 6534 8449.

Add your ideas. Read other people’s ideas. Write more in response to other people.

The state of nature and the social contract: Elements of a normative theory

Is anthropology a science? Let’s think a bit more about part of what that means.

These are quotations of the Enlightenment philosopher, Jean-Jacques Rousseau.

[Man in the state of nature is] satisfying his hunger under an oak, quenching his thirst at the first stream, finding his bed at the foot of the same tree that furnished his meal; and therewith his needs are satisfied. (Rousseau [1755] 1964, 105)


The first person who, having fenced off a plot of ground, took it into his head to say this is mine and found people simple enough to believe him, was the true founder of civil society. (Rousseau [1755] 1964, 141)


[Ironically, uniting as a group to restrain individuals] was, or must have been, the origin of society and laws, which gave new fetters to the weak and new forces to the rich, destroyed natural freedom for all time, established forever the law of property and inequality, changed a clever usurpation into an irrevocable right, and for the profit of a few ambitious men henceforth subjected the whole human race to work, servitude, and misery. (Rousseau [1755] 1964, 160)

The idea of a social “science” is a break with normative inquiry into society and politics

Anthropology asks empirical questions and seeks empirical explanations, rather than engaging in normative inquiry.

tl;dr Durkheim creates an empirical social science to replace normative theories of society

These are Durkheim's principles:

Although Rousseau and Durkheim have different purposes, I think Rousseau’s ideas have had an important influence on empirical theories of society. More on that later…

What makes me me?

Durkheim’s theory of society is based on an assumption he makes about how people think and experience the world.

We all start with one theory of how we think and experience reality, and there is some truth in it.

We can say that this is the default, intuitively true model of what makes you you and me me. We can’t not think this way about own own subjectivity and our subjective experience of the world.

The default model of subjectivity is that we are each an individual. What if our intuition is wrong?

We start with the premise that we are a specific kind of self-conscious subject. It entails several features:

Each of us operates as if we are an individual subject: internally complete, self-contained, autonomous, and rational.

What if we are wrong? Or, better yet, what if the default model is not the whole story…?

Durkheim finds a flaw in Rousseau’s assumptions

Rousseau assumes that people are rational, autonomous individuals in the state of nature.

He concludes that, because humans have left the state of nature, and now live together and cooperate with each other in groups, then

Is this a good empirical theory of society, that is, an explanation of what is?

Durkheim says that no, it does not work.

Durkheim says that subjects are not autonomous individuals. We are all homo duplex.

The default assumption that each of us is an autonomous, rational individual is only partly true.

I would argue that Rousseau’s ideas are still useful. Society is not based on a contract, but it does involve alienating part of oneself.

Rousseau and Durkheim might end up agreeing that people’s collective existence involves a rupture with a (speculative) state of nature as an individual.

We each live inside our own heads, but society still happens

We are right now living a scene in a movie. “Interior. Classroom.”

But we are also effortlessly accomplishing an objective reality too: an anthropology class.

Without knowing or choosing it, we have collectively participated in the social construction of reality.

Which one is the best example of a social fact?

Answer a multiple-choice question on Mentos, the fresh-meter.

Go to https://menti.com and log in with code 1608 6071. (Or, use this link: https://www.menti.com/alu7ijqprvgt.)

Breaching experiments

Harold Garfinkel asked his students to conduct “breaching experiments” as a way to “[make] commonplace scenes visible” (Garfinkel 1967, 36).

How do you think the people subjected to the experiment reacted?

If you were performing these experiments on your parents, fellow bus-riders, and friends, how would it feel?

References and further reading

“Chocolate Is the Most Popular Ice Cream Flavor.” 2018. YouGov. July 11, 2018. https://today.yougov.com/consumer/articles/21153-most-popular-ice-creams.

Durkheim, Emile. (1893) 1933. The division of labor in society. Glencoe, Ill.: The Free Press. http://archive.org/details/divisionoflabori0000unse.

———. (1914) 2005. “The Dualism of Human Nature and Its Social Conditions.” Durkheimian Studies / Études Durkheimiennes 11: 35–45. https://www.jstor.org/stable/23866721.

Garfinkel, Harold. 1967. Studies in Ethnomethodology. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall.

Rousseau, Jean-Jacques. (1755) 1964. “Discourse on the origin and foundations of inequality among men [The second discourse].” In The first and second discourses, edited by Roger D. Masters, translated by Roger D. Masters and Judith R. Masters, 77–228. New York: St. Martin’s Press. http://archive.org/details/firstseconddisco00rousrich.