Wednesday, September 30, 2015

Anthropology: What Makes It a Science?

Let’s say you’re asked to form an image for the word “science” in your mind. Most people, myself included, would probably picture something along the lines of a person in a lab coat analyzing DNA or something. This is quite a one-sided view of science, and many scientists never wear lab coats and their jobs don’t involve DNA.

If lab coats aren’t required to make a discipline a “science,” then what is? Webster’s Dictionary defines science as “knowledge acquired by careful observation, by deduction of laws which govern charges and conditions, and by testing these deductions by experiment.” With that definition, practically anything can be studied as a science.

I find anthropology to be one of the least “sciency” of the sciences, but after hearing Dr. Laurel Kendall talk about anthropology, I started thinking about what does make anthropology a science.

I went to Dr. Laurel Kendall’s lecture Picturing Spirits in Korea at the American Museum of Natural History just last week. In her research she asks what makes Korean Shaman’s paintings sacred, rather than just works of art. How is Dr. Kendall’s question and proposed answers scientific? How is her approach different than the countless other philosophers and theologians who have contemplated similar questions?



 One answer is that she reached her conclusions through experimental data and utilization of the scientific method, but I think there’s more to it than that.

Another answer has much to do with how the results are viewed. Theologians are insiders, they study their own religion. They would take the question “what makes an object sacred” and leave the answer within the context of what adherents to their respective religion believe. Philosophers do the opposite. They take this question about sacred art out of the realm of religion and put it into more generalized concepts, but they still keep the answer within the context of belief. Comparative religious scholars compare what makes an object sacred across various religions, but still the answer is in terms of beliefs and religion.

But, when anthropologists – scientists like Dr. Kendall - ask what makes an object sacred, they take the answer in context of culture and society. For example, Dr. Kendall not only discussed what makes a painting sacred to a shaman and her followers, but how the painting is valued by secular art collectors outside of the religion and even outside of Korea With Korean culture is becoming more modernized, native Korean religion and the sacredness of the paintings are changing. This shift makes the study of change possible, and that’s where scientific methods come in. 

Tuesday, September 22, 2015

Arachnids: The Recluse Spiders

Insects are everywhere. I try not to dwell on the idea that insects are crawling on everything all the time, but entomologists seem to love the fact that there are of multitudes of insects everywhere we go. That's probably why I'm not a entomologist. Still, insects are a vital part of life, and I am interested in learning more about them.

Mediterranean recluse. Photo by Antonio Serrano
This past week I attended The New York Entomological Society’s meeting on arachnids. Biologist James Beck came up from Louisiana to The American Museum of Natural History in NYC to talk about a specific genus of arachnids the Loxosceles, commonly known as recluse spiders. James Beck studies the ranges of two species of recluse, the native brown recluse (Loxosceles reclusa) and the invasive Mediterranean recluse (Loxosceles rufescens).

Recluses aren’t rare, but the public knows very little about these spiders except the fact that they are venomous. At the lecture I learned that people, even doctors treating spider bites, tend to think every spider that isn’t a widow is a recluse. James Beck told us that misidentification of recluses went so far in a nationwide survey conducted in 2005 that people asked to send in specimens of brown recluse didn’t send in a single one. The public did send many other spider species, and even a scorpion, but no brown recluses.

I’ll admit that I would probably not be able to tell the difference between a brown recluse and a Mediterranean recluse if I saw either one. I don’t think I would mistake a scorpion for a spider like someone in the study did, but identifying Loxosceles is not an easy feat, as James Beck explained. Brown recluse and Mediterranean recluse can be distinguished by their tibial segments (a part of the leg) and mouthparts, both of which require magnification to see. Different recluse species don’t like to live side by side, so if a Mediterranean recluse is identified, there shouldn’t be any brown recluse around.

Knowing the difference between the two types of recluse might be tricky, but identifying the general genus Loxosceles isn’t as hard. Loxosceles are terrestrial spiders that like to live in places like crowded sheds and basements.


Brown Recluse Photo by Rosa Pineda
Don’t worry about finding a recluse if you don’t want to. They are named “recluse” for a reason, and Loxosceles are timid spiders. They rarely bite unless provoked and aren’t at all interested in harming humans. Spiders get a bad rap for being venomous and aggressive, but in reality they are helpful creatures that kill pests like cockroaches. To avoid being bitten, if you see a spider on you, don’t smack it, gently put it down. Try to bring out that bug loving entomologist we all have within us and both you and the spider will come out happier.
 photo of a live brown recluse from the lecture