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Both practicing archaeoastronomers and observers of the discipline approach it from different perspectives.
George Gummerman and Miranda Warburton view archaeoastronomy as part of an archaeology informed by cultural anthropology and aimed at understanding a " group's conception of themselves in relation to the heavens ', in a word, its cosmology.
Todd Bostwick argued that " archaeoastronomy is anthropology – the study of human behavior in the past and present.
" Paul Bahn has described archaeoastronomy as an area of cognitive archaeology.
Other researchers relate archaeoastronomy to the history of science, either as it relates to a culture's observations of nature and the conceptual framework they devised to impose an order on those observations or as it relates to the political motives which drove particular historical actors to deploy certain astronomical concepts or techniques.
Art historian Richard Poss took a more flexible approach, maintaining that the astronomical rock art of the North American Southwest should be read employing " the hermeneutic traditions of western art history and art criticism " Astronomers, however, raise different questions, seeking to provide their students with identifiable precursors of their discipline, and are especially concerned with the important question of how to confirm that specific sites are, indeed, intentionally astronomical.

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