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Culture
The knowledge, language, values, customs, and material objects that are passed from person to person and from one generation to the next in a human group or society | Culture |
Our biological and genetic makeup | Nature |
Our social environment | Nurture |
An unlearned, biologically determined behavior pattern common to all members of a species that predictable occurs whenever certain environmental conditions exist | Instinct |
An unlearned, biologically determined, involuntary response to some physical stimuli | Reflex |
Unlearned, biologically determined impulses common to all members of a species that satisfy need such as those for sleep, food, water, or sexual gratification | Drive |
Consists of the physical or tangible creations that members of a society make, use, and share | Material Culture |
The knowledge, techniques, and tools that make it possible for people to transform resources into usable forms, and the knowledge and skill required to use them after they are developed | Technology |
Consists of the abstract or intangible human creations of society the influence people's behavior such as language, beliefs, values, rules of behavior, family patterns, and political systems | Nonmaterial Culture |
The entail acceptance or conviction that certain things are true or real | Belief |
Customs and practices that occur across all societies such as appearance, activities, social institutions, and customary practices | Cultural Universals |
Four common nonmaterial cultural components which contribute to both harmony and strife in a society | Symbols, Language, Values, and Norms |
Anything that meaningfully represents something else | Symbol |
A set of symbols that expresses ideas and enables people to think and communicate with one another | Language |
Language shapes the view of reality of its speakers | Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis |
Collective ideas about what is right or wrong, good or bad, and desirable or undesirable in a particular culture | Values |
Valus that conflict with one another or are mutually exclusive | Value Contradictions |
The values and standards of behavior that people in a society profess to hold | Ideal Culture |
The values and standards of behavior that people actually follow | Real Culture |
Established rules of behavior or standards of conduct | Norms |
State what behavior is appropriate or acceptable | Prescriptive Norms |
State what behavior is inappropriate or unacceptable | Proscriptive Norms |
Written down and involve specific punishments for violators; most commonly laws; enforced by sanctions | Formal Norms |
rewards for appropriate behavior or penalties for inappropriate behavior | Sanctions |
Unwritten standards of behavior understood by people who share a common identity | Informal Norms |
Informal norms or everyday customs that may be violated without serious consequences within a particular culture | Folkways |
Strongly held norms with moral and ethical connotations that may not be violated without serious consequences in a particular culture | Mores |
Mores so strong that their violation is considered to be extremely offensive and even unmentionable | Taboos |
Formal, stadardized norms that have been enacted by legislatures and are enforced by formal sanctions | Laws |
Deals with disputes among persons or groups | Civil Law |
Deals with public safety and wellbeing | Criminal Law |
Changes that make a significant difference in many people's lives | New Technology |
A gap between the technical development of a society and its moral and legal institutions | Cultural Lag |
The process of learning about something previously unknown or unrecognized | Discovery |
the process of reshaping existing cultural items into a new form | Invention |
The transmission of cultural items or social practices from one group or society to another through such means s exploration, war, the media, tourism, and immigration | Diffusion |
The wide range of cultural differences found between and within nations | Cultural Diversity |
Include people who share a common culture and who are typically from similar social, religious, political, and economic backgrounds | Homogeneous Society |
Include people who are dissimilar in regard to social characteristics such as religion, income, or race/ethnicity | Heterogeneous Society |
A category of people who share distinguishing attributes, beliefs, values, and/or norms, that set them apart in some significant manner from the dominant culture | Subculture |
A group that strongly rejects dominant societal values and norms and seeks alternative lifestyles | Counterculture |
The disorientation that people feel when they encounter cultures radically different from their own and believe that they cannot depend on their own taken-for-granted assumptions about life | Culture Shock |
The practice of judging all other cultures by one's own culture | Ethnocentrism |
The belief that the behaviors and customs of any culture must be viewed and analyzed by the culture's own standards | Cultural Relativism |
Consists of classical music, opera, ballet, live theater, and other activities usually patronized by elite audiences | High Culture |
Consists of activities, products, and services that are assumed to appeal primarily to members of the middle and working classes | Popular Culture |
Views high culture as a device used by the dominant class to exclude the subordinate classes; proposed by Pierre Bourdieu | Cultural Capital Theory |
People who share similar artistic, recreational, and intellectual interests but are not necessarily members of an organized group | Taste Publics |
Made up of people who not only share similar tastes but also participate in the same cultural groups or organizations | Taste Cultures |
A temporary but widely copied activity followed enthusiastically by large numbers of people | Fad |
A currently valued style of behavior, thinking, or appearance that is longer lasting and more widespread than a fad | Fashion |
The extensive infusion of one nation's culture into other nations | Cultural Imperialism |
An integrated system of ideas that is external to, and coerce of, people | Ideology |
Objects outside ourselves that we purchase to satisfy our human needs or wants | Commodities |
Popular Anthropology sets
Are collective ideas about what is right or wrong good or bad and desirable or undesirable in a particular culture group of answer choices?
Values are collective ideas about what is right or wrong, good or bad, and desirable or undesirable in a particular culture.
What are the abstract ideas that a group holds about what is good right or desirable?
Values are abstract ideas about what a group believes to be good, right, and desirable (e.g. the concept of good vs evil ). Norms are the social rules and guidelines that prescribe appropriate behavior in particular situations.
Which term refers to a group of people who share a distinctive set of cultural beliefs and Behaviours that differ in some significant way from that of the larger society?
Subcultures. Even though subcultures participate in the larger society, subcultures are a group of people who share a distinctive set of cultural beliefs and behaviors that differ in some significant way - values, norms, heritages, rituals - from the larger society.
Are informal norms or everyday customs that may be violated without serious consequences within a particular culture?
folkways: informal norms or everyday customs that may be violated without serious consequences within a particular culture.