I'm afraid you are wrong on this one. Archeology is not firmly in the Humanities camp. In the United States, Archeology is a sub-discipline of Anthropology. Anthropology is a Social-Science. Some might argue that there are those archeologists who are more humanistic in there approach...more like art histortians, reading ancient frieze's as texts, but the bulk of archeologists see themselves as social scientists. Similarly, History is another field that sits between Humanities and Social Sciences....and I know lots of professional historians who would be irritated with being called humanistic.Murderiser said:One slightly glaring problem with Mass Effect is Liara. She is a Xeno-archeologist (someone who digs up and categorises the remains of unknown civilisations) and yet is listed as an 'Asari Scientist'. Archeologists do know a smattering of science (it does help with digs) but they are firmly in the HUMANITIES camp and are not SCIENTISTS, as they study the works of humans. I think the confusion probably set in as it is possible to gain a doctorate in both history and archeology which does give them the right to stick 'Dr.' in front of their names.
This may sound pedantic, but as a humanities student, this is such a collosal error I'm amazed that none of the writers pointed it out!
The fields are not just about the object of study, but the method of study.
I am a Musicologist, but one who studies music in a humanistic way.
There are also musicologists who study music in a historical way they see as being social sciency.
There are also sociologists who study music in a social science way.
There are also music cognition people who study music in a hard science way.
There are also performance people who study music in an Arts way.
Heck, there are some theorists who study music in a Math way.
I see very easily how, as a xeno-archeologist, Liara with call herself a scientist...I could also see some xeno-biologists turning up their noses and dismissing her as "only" a social scientist and not a "real" scientist...but then, we also don't know Asari academic training. For all we know, to become an Asari xeno-archeologist might involve a lot of biology courses. Perhaps in their culture xeno-archeology tends more towards the harder sciences than the social sciences...or is more of a hybrid of the social sciences and the hard sciences.
ETA: In every university I have attended or taught at, or the universities my colleagues have attended or taught at, archeology/anthropology classes never count for Humanities distribution credits, they always count for Social Science credit. So, for in the US at least, no way is archeology squarely in the humanities. And I'm saying this as a humanist (who is generally lumped in the arts).