Anthropic units
Academic term in archaeology, social studies and measurement
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The term anthropic unit (from Greek άνθρωπος, 'human') is used with different meanings in archaeology, in measurement and in social studies.
In archaeology
In measurement
Following the coinage of the term "anthropic principle" by Brandon Carter in 1973–1974,[2] units of measurement that are on a human scale are occasionally referred to as "anthropic units", as the example here:[3]
"… the metre and kilogram occupy a reasonably central position as far as symmetry in positive and negative powers of ten is concerned, emphasising that the SI units are natural anthropic units …"
— Brian William Petley (1985)
In social studies
In fields of study such as sociology and ethnography, anthropic units are identifiable groupings of people. For example:[4]
"Ethnographers have been accustomed to deal with the 'race', the 'tribe' and the 'nation' as social or anthropic units …"
— J. J. Thomson (1896)
and:[5]
"... among the more primitive anthropic units it seems a grave ineptitude for the Chukchees not to adopt the snowhouse building complex from the neighboring Eskimos"
— Jacob Robert Kantor (1944)