Anthropology’s Origins, Christianity, and a Perspective from Africa
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Keywords

Anthropology
theology
language embodiment
Christianity
development
Africa.

Abstract

This article addresses the relationship between Christianity and anthropology from a perspective of the need of the church for anthropologists, and of the lack of a solid epistemological foundation for modern anthropology. Classical anthropology has been exposed as a 'broken system' by postmodern anthropologists, but buried assumptions from the classical model continue to run by faith on prior momentum. A re-integration of anthropology into a Christian theological paradigm is proposed as the means of honestly, truthfully, and genuinely, providing a rootedness and foundation for anthropology's future development. Work on the embodiment of language helps to provide means for opening a legitimate space between objectivity and subjectivity in this article.

https://doi.org/10.18251/okh.v1i1.3
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Copyright (c) 2017 Jim Harries