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An Athapaskan Way of Knowing: Chipewyan Ontology

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An Athapaskan Way of Knowing: Chipewyan Ontology
Author(s)Smith, David M.
AbstractThe ontology of those Canadian Chipewyan who still actively hunt, fish, and trap is based on the assumption that one must maintain a harmonious communication with nature, especially with animal persons. To this end, emphasis is placed on paying attention to the full complement of holistically interacting senses, giving more attention to the intuitive and affective realms than is typical for Euro-American ontologies. No single sensorium dominates metaphorically; greatest validity is given to firsthand, experiential knowledge attained in waking life or in dreams, with the powerful stories of the elders serving as guides to understanding. Chipewyan thought is monistic – there are no human/nature, mind/body, thought/action, or spirit/matter dualisms. There is a definite cognitive connection among the inseparability of the senses, an implicit monistic philosophy, the understanding that individual can never be separate from society, social egalitarianism, and the belief in the need for maintaining harmonious communication with animal persons.
IssueNo3
Pages412-413
ArticleAccess to Article
SourceAmerican Ethnologist
VolumeNo25
PubDateAugust 1998
ISBN_ISSN0094-0496
Browse Path(s)Anthropology
—-Social/Cultural Anthropology
——–Culture
————Human Nature and Culture

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