FY2002
In anthropological research on Latin America, numerous sociocultural phenomena
have been explained in terms of concepts like institutions, structures of authority,
and forms and spoken of in terms of firmly established entities. For example,
for social phenomena, we have cargo system, ceque system, communal systems
of indigenous peoples, and populism systems and in terms of culture, the Chabin
forms or Cuzco forms. However, among these are quite a few instances in which
we have to doubt the value of assigning the appellation “system” to
something, or where there is absolutely no guarantee that the item in question
is even stable. This study proposes to empirically research phenomena like these
which until now have been uncritically accepted, in terms of new systems theory
arising from research on such things as immune systems, nervous systems or complex
systems, so as well as in the academic fields of ethnology, history, and aesthetics
to thoroughly reinvestigate the situation. By doing so, while undertaking theoretical
investigations into systems theory, we should be able to rectify the theoretical
course for Latin American research which prior to now has probably been headed
in the wrong direction.