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Based on descriptions of the material remains of human activity,
archaeological publications propose theories or "constructs" that are
hoped to enrich our understanding of ancient societies in all their
many facets -- history, economy, organization, sociopolitics,
technologies, beliefs, etc. The "logicist" program is the 20-year old
term given to an ensemble of research aiming to clarify the mechanisms
and foundations of the reasoning which organize such constructs (Gardin
1980). This program rather quickly gave birth to the "schematizations"
underlying such reasoning, in the sense which the logician J-B. Grize
gave to that term: "models generated by a discourse in natural
language" (1974). This shift from written texts to schematizations is a
reduction, as are all models, but one which nonetheless retains the
totality of elements constituting the cognitive constructs per se,
separated from the rhetorical trappings which shape the presentation of
traditional narratives.
The next stage in the logicist
program is based on an observed parallel between the bipartite
structure of logicist schematizations (data bases and rewrite formulas
'[IF]p ---> [THEN]q'), and the general computational paradigm
(Gardin et al. 1987). This homology generates two kinds of computer
applications: (a) simulated experiences of reasoning, which concern
problems of methodology (Francfort 1991); (b) a program of electronic
publications in a new genre, built according to the principles of
logicist modeling (Roux 2000). The Arkeotek project is one of the major
pieces of this program (Gardin and Roux 2004).
Finally,
epistemological questions raised by all such works are now being
reconsidered in a more general and long-term debate on the human
sciences, in connection with dualisms such as Science and Literature,
Mathematical Formalism and Natural Language, Models and Narratives,
Professional Reason and Common Sense, etc. (Gardin 2001, 2003).
References
Francfort
H.-P. 1991. The sense of Measure in Archaeology : an Approach to the
Analysis of Proto-urban Societies with the Aid of an Expert System. In : J.-C. Gardin & C.S. Peebles (eds.), Representations in Archaeology, Indianapolis, Indiana University Press, p. 291-314.
Gardin J.-C. 1980. Archaeological Constructs, an Aspect of Theoretical Archaeology, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press and Editions de la Maison des Sciences de l'Homme. Adaptation française : 1979. Une archéologie théorique, Paris, Hachette. Traduction russe : 1983. Teoreticheskaja Arkheologija, Moscou, Ed. Progress.
Gardin J.-C., Guillaume O., Herman P.Q., Hesnard A., Lagrange M.-S., Renaud M. et Zadora-Rio E. 1987. Systèmes experts et sciences humaines : le cas de l'archéologie, Paris, Eyrolles. Traduction anglaise : 1988. Artificial Intelligence and Expert Systems : Case Studies in the Knowledge Domain of Archaeology, Chichester, Ellis Horwood.
Gardin J.-C. 2001. Modèles et Récits. In : J.-M. Berthelot (dir.), Epistémologie des sciences sociales, Paris, Presses Universitaires de France, pp. 407-454.
Gardin J.-C. 2003. Archaeological Discourse,
Conceptual Modelling and Digitalisation: an Interim Report of the
Logicist Program. In : M. Doerr and A. Sarris (eds), CAA 2002 - The Digital Heritage of Archaeology, Hellenic Ministry of Culture, Archive of Monuments and Publications, Heraklion, p. 5-12.
Gardin J-C. et Roux V. 2004. The Arkeotek
project : a european network of knowledge bases in the archaeology of
techniques . Archeologia e Calcolatori,
15, 25-40
Grize J.-B. 1974. Logique mathématique, logique naturelle et modèles. In : Sciences humaines et formalisation, Jahresbericht der Schweizerischen Geisteswissenschafklichen Gesellschaft, pp. 201-207.
Roux V. (sous la direction de), 2000. Cornaline de l'Inde : Des pratiques de Cambay aux techno-systèmes de l'Indus, Paris, Editions de la Maison des sciences de l'homme, 534 p. Cédérom bilingue inclus.
Roux V. avec la participation de Ph. Blasco 2004. Faciliter la
consultation de textes scientifiques. Nouvelles pratiques éditoriales. Hermès, Critique de la raison numérique,
CNRS éditions, 39, 151-159.
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