Philippe Descola

Philippe Descola
Philippe Descola - June 2011
Born 1949
France
Era Contemporary philosophy/Social anthropology
Region French philosophy
School Structuralism
Main interests
Anthropology, Epistemology, Ethnology, Ontology
Notable ideas
The four ontologies (animism, totemism, analogism, naturalism)

Philippe Descola (born 1949) is a renowned French anthropologist noted for studies of the Achuar, one of several Jivaroan peoples.

Background

Descola started with an interest in philosophy and later became a student of Claude Lévi-Strauss.[1] His ethnographic studies in the Amazon region of Ecuador began in 1976 and was funded by CNRS. He lived with the Achuar from 1976 to 1978.[2] His reputation largely arises from these studies. He has given lectures in over forty universities and academic institutions abroad, including the Beatrice Blackwood Lecture at Oxford, the George Lurcy Lecture at Chicago, the Munro Lecture at Edinburgh, the Radcliffe-Brown Lecture at the British Academy, the Clifford Geertz Memorial Lecture at Princeton, the Jensen Lecture at Frankfurt and the Victor Goldschmidt Lecture at Heidelberg. He has chaired the Société des Américanistes since 2002 and the scientific committee of the Fondation Fyssen from 2001 to 2009, as well as holding memberships in many other scientific committees.[3] Descola is currently chair of anthropology at the Collège de France. His wife, Anne-Christine Taylor, is an ethnologist.

Distinctions

1996: CNRS Silver medal[4]

1997: Knight of the French Order of Academic Palms[5]

2004: French National Order of Merit[6]

2006: Foreign Honorary Members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences[7]

2010: Elected as corresponding fellow of the British Academy[8]

2010: Officer in the French Legion of Honor

2011: Édouard Bonnefous Price from Academy of Moral and Political Sciences[9]

2012: CNRS Gold Medal

2014: International Cosmos Prize

Partial bibliography

References

External links