You are on page 1of 1

CULTURE - A population's arts, beliefs, and institutions, as well as its way of life in general, are what

make up their culture. Culture is something that is passed down from one generation to the next. One
definition of culture describes it as "the way of life for an entire society." As such, it encompasses
protocols on etiquette and clothes, as well as language, religion, and artistic rites.

CULTURE UNIVERSE - The concept of a culture universe refers to anything that is present in every
culture. A good number of these are associated with fundamental requirements or hankerings. The rites
of passage, religious beliefs, and ethical behaviors are frequently included in the cultural cosmos. In
order to survive, every person requires food, clothing, and a safe place to live.

MAIN CULTURE - The term "main culture" refers to the cumulative deposit of knowledge, experience,
beliefs, values, attitudes, meanings, hierarchies, religion, notions of time, roles, spatial relations,
concepts of the universe, and material objects and possessions that a group of people have acquired
over the course of generations through individual and group striving. This deposit is known as "main
culture." Main culture, in the broadest sense possible, refers to cultivated conduct; this refers to the
entirety of a person's learnt, collected experience that is socially transmitted, or, to put it another way,
behavior acquired via the process of social learning.

MATERIAL CULTURE - Material culture is the part of social reality that is based on the things and
buildings that people use and see every day. It includes how things are used, consumed, made, and
traded, as well as the ways people act, the rules they follow, and the rituals they take part in.

NON MATERIAL CULTURE - People's views, values, rules, norms, morals, language, organizations, and
institutions are all examples of non-material aspects of their culture. For example, religion is a non-
material cultural thought made up of ideas and beliefs about God, worship, morals, and ethics. Based on
these beliefs, then, a culture's response to religious topics, problems, and events is set.

FOLKWAYS - It is the way a town or group of people have always done things or lived. Folkways are a
developed form of habits, so they are an important way to control social behavior because they do so
directly and mainly. Practices are ways of acting that are almost always the same in a group or society
and are passed down from one generation to the next.

MORES - Mores are social norms that are commonly observed within a given society or culture. They
can also be referred to as social conventions. Within any given culture, the mores dictate what kinds of
behavior are deemed to be morally acceptable or unacceptable.

You might also like