@article{oai:minpaku.repo.nii.ac.jp:00004581, author = {吉田, 集而 and Yoshida, Shuji}, issue = {3}, journal = {国立民族学博物館研究報告, Bulletin of the National Museum of Ethnology}, month = {Jan}, note = {Problems of folk taxonomy have been discussed by many scholars. This paper presents the differences and similarities in taxonomies of illness given by four Toba-Batak informants. The data were analysed using the KJ method, a technique developed by Kawakita Jiro. It is somewhat similar to Berlin's slip sorting task, but differs in the following ways : (1) moving up from terminal categories to upper levels; (2) naming a grouped cluster of paper slips; and (3) ordering named clusters according to their relational distances. For the Toba-Batak data the taxonomic differences of illness, appearing in the upper level of the taxonomy, seem to be caused by differing orientations of the informants. One informant made up a taxonomy from the viewpoint of curing illness and another organized it according to the identifying terminologies used in illness. The similarities of each taxonomy given by the four informants at lower level indicate that the same groupings of terminal categories of illness exist. Results of the analysis show that there is no common folk taxonomy of illness among the Toba-Batak, but only clusters of terminal categories of illness. They sometimes made new categories at the upper level of taxonomy. The categories may therefore be considered covert. Naming the categories gives a more accurate understanding of their subconscious thoughts. The Toba-Batak people did not feel it necessary to make up taxonomy of illness. There is, therefore, no common taxonomy among them, but potential taxonomies which may become overt in a particular situation. The potential taxonomies can be under-stood when more data, from a larger number of informants, become vailable.}, pages = {416--464}, title = {トバ・バタック族における病気の民俗分類}, volume = {3}, year = {1979}, yomi = {ヨシダ, シュウジ} }