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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
5 pages in length. The composition of culture is that which makes man the unique entity he truly is. Subtle nuances and glaring differences alike assemble a collection of global communities whereby habits, beliefs, attire, rituals and family reflect how various societies conduct their lives. While people are typically born into cultural influences, they can also be learned throughout one's life as a way to incorporate more than one ethnic countenance. The very nature of culture, therefore, illustrates the distinctive qualities of a given society; to understand and accept more than just one's own culture is to recognize the overwhelming diversity that makes up planet Earth. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCCulture.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
family reflect how various societies conduct their lives. While people are typically born into cultural influences, they can also be learned throughout ones life as a way to incorporate
more than one ethnic countenance. The very nature of culture, therefore, illustrates the distinctive qualities of a given society; to understand and accept more than just ones own culture
is to recognize the overwhelming diversity that makes up planet Earth. "Our uniqueness contributes to our sense of individuality and separateness while our social imperative contributes to our sense
of community and belonging. In order to survive and thrive, we need both diversity (individuality and differences) and community (togetherness and attachment)" (Moreno, no date).
According to William H. Swatos Globalization and Religious Fundamentalism, "modern world culture is more than a simple set of ideals or values diffusing and operating separately
in individual sentiments in each society...The power of modern culture -- like that of medieval Christendom -- lies in the fact that it is a shared and binding set of
rules exogenous to any given society, and located not only in individual sentiments, but also in many world institutions" (Swatos, 2001, p. 288). As such, the social, political, economical
and religious activities experienced in everyday life represents the very essence of what it means to be a human being. These representations illustrate how and why a person acts
the way he does, how he attributes moods, feelings and emotions, the way in which he interacts with others, as well as what governs overall cultural behavior.
Geert Hofstede devoted life and career to the study of collective cultural behavior of humans in an attempt to ascertain the laws that influence such behavior
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