Examples of cultural relativism in the following topics:
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- Ethnocentrism, in contrast to cultural relativism, is the tendency to look at the world primarily from the perspective of one's own culture.
- Cultural relativism can be difficult to maintain when we're confronted with cultures whose practices or beliefs conflict with our own.
- This approach is known as "cultural relativism."
- Cultural relativism is the principle that an individual person's beliefs and activities should be understood by others in terms of that individual's own culture.
- Examine the concepts of ethnocentrism and cultural relativism in relation to your own and other cultures in society
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- Ethnocentrism is the tendency to look at the world primarily from the perspective of one's own culture.
- Many claim that ethnocentrism occurs in every society; ironically, ethnocentrism may be something that all cultures have in common.
- Cultural relativism is the belief that the concepts and values of a culture cannot be fully translated into, or fully understood in, other languages; that a specific cultural artifact (e.g. a ritual) has to be understood in terms of the larger symbolic system of which it is a part.
- An example of cultural relativism might include slang words from specific languages (and even from particular dialects within a language).
- There is not a clear English translation of the word, and in order to fully comprehend its many possible uses a cultural relativist would argue that it would be necessary to fully immerse oneself in cultures where the word is used.
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- A cultural universal is an element, pattern, trait, or institution that is common to all human cultures worldwide.
- There is a tension in cultural anthropology and cultural sociology between the claim that culture is a universal (the fact that all human societies have culture), and that it is also particular (culture takes a tremendous variety of forms around the world).
- The idea of cultural universals—that specific aspects of culture are common to all human cultures—runs contrary to cultural relativism.
- Cultural relativism was, in part, a response to Western ethnocentrism.
- Discuss cultural universals in terms of the various elements of culture, such as norms and beliefs
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- Material culture consists in physical objects that humans make.
- People's relationship to and perception of objects are socially and culturally dependent.
- This view of culture, which came to dominate anthropology between World War I and World War II, implied that each culture was bounded and had to be understood as a whole, on its own terms.
- The result is a belief in cultural relativism, which suggests that there are no 'better' or 'worse' cultures, just different cultures .
- They constitute an increasingly significant part of our material culture.
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- Although more inclusive, this approach to culture still allowes for distinctions between civilized and primitive, or tribal, cultures.
- For instance, the high culture of elites is now contrasted with popular or pop culture.
- In this sense, high culture no longer refers to the idea of being cultured, as all people are cultured.
- Most social scientists today reject the cultured vs. uncultured concept of culture.
- The result is a belief in cultural relativism, which suggests that there are no "better" or "worse" cultures, just different cultures.
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- Culture describes a collective way of life, or way of doing things.
- Cultural norms are the shared, sanctioned, and integrated systems of beliefs and practices that are passed down through generations and characterize a cultural group.
- This is where culture intersects with ethics.
- Cultural relativism is also considered more tolerant than universalism because, if there is no basis for making moral judgments between cultures, then cultures have to be tolerant of each other.
- Explain the role of culture in shaping moral and ethical behavior
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- The crucial question is whether human psychological faculties are mostly universal and innate, or whether they are mostly a result of learning, and, therefore, subject to cultural and social processes that vary between places and times.
- The Universalist view holds that all humans share the same set of basic faculties, and that variability due to cultural differences is negligible.
- The relativist position, which basically refers to a kind of Cultural relativism, sees different cultural groups as having different conceptual schemes that are not necessarily compatible or commensurable, nor more or less in accord with the external reality.
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- For that, we need culture.
- Yet, examples of culture do not, in themselves, present a clear understanding of the concept of culture; culture is more than the object or behavior.
- For instance, the high culture of elites is now contrasted with popular or pop culture.
- In this sense, high culture no longer refers to the idea of being cultured, as all people are cultured.
- The result is a belief in cultural relativism, which suggests that there are no "better" or "worse" cultures, just different cultures.
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- Postmodernism (also known as post-structuralism) is skeptical of explanations that claim to be valid for all groups - cultures, traditions, or races - and instead focuses on the relative truths of each person (i.e. postmodernism = relativism).
- Postmodernism frequently serves as an ambiguous overarching term for skeptical interpretations of culture, literature, art, philosophy, economics, architecture, fiction, and literary criticism.
- Postmodernist thought often emphasizes constructivism, idealism, pluralism, relativism, and scepticism in its approaches to knowledge and understanding.
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- Core culture is the underlying value that defines organizational identity through observable culture.
- Core and observable culture are two facets of the same organizational culture, with core culture being inward-facing and intrinsic and observable culture being more external and tangible (outward-facing).
- Core culture, as the name denotes, is the root of what observable culture will communicate to stakeholders.
- This is where observable culture begins to transform into core culture.
- Core culture has the same relationship with observable culture: core culture is created first, and ultimately drives the visible cultural aspects of the organization.