To be clear, I am not 'calling out' anyone, merely musing that one corner of a field seems - disproportionate to its numbers - to focus on this sort of thing. That said, you've opened the question of how we understand the structure of the field, so let me treat that. 1/?
Of course we build on each other's evidence and arguments. The historian's study is informed by the archaeologist's fresh evidence and goes in to inform the philologist's understanding of their text's context (and vice versa, not a one-directional flow). 11/?
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At the same time, my research uses zoological evidence, which does not make me a biologist or a zoologist, just like being a material culture historian doesn't make me an archaeologist. And I think that is a valid distinction to make. 12/?
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If I may offer an analogy, the hastatus, the triarius, the veles and the eques are all on the same team, relying on each other, but that doesn't mean they all do the same thing or that there are no differences between them. 13/?
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