Social Sciences, asked by ITZZme03, 2 months ago


5 differences between traditional and supersitious


5 diffrencesanswer correctly

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Answered by Anonymous
1

A tradition is something you do regularly. It is a tradition in our family to gather for Thanksgiving.

A tradition is something you do regularly. It is a tradition in our family to gather for Thanksgiving.A superstition implies some sort of cause and effect. It is a belief, with no evidence, that one act will cause or deter another. Believing that it is bad luck to walk under a ladder is a superstition (you believe that the space under a ladder has some magical properties that will cause bad things to happen if you enter it). Throwing a pinch of spilled salt over your shoulder will avoid bad luck, for example.

A tradition is something you do regularly. It is a tradition in our family to gather for Thanksgiving.A superstition implies some sort of cause and effect. It is a belief, with no evidence, that one act will cause or deter another. Believing that it is bad luck to walk under a ladder is a superstition (you believe that the space under a ladder has some magical properties that will cause bad things to happen if you enter it). Throwing a pinch of spilled salt over your shoulder will avoid bad luck, for example.My friend says that her grandmother believed that, on a cloudy day, if there were enough blue sky to cut out the shape of a pair of sailor’s trousers, you could make the sun come out. I’m not kidding.

A tradition is something you do regularly. It is a tradition in our family to gather for Thanksgiving.A superstition implies some sort of cause and effect. It is a belief, with no evidence, that one act will cause or deter another. Believing that it is bad luck to walk under a ladder is a superstition (you believe that the space under a ladder has some magical properties that will cause bad things to happen if you enter it). Throwing a pinch of spilled salt over your shoulder will avoid bad luck, for example.My friend says that her grandmother believed that, on a cloudy day, if there were enough blue sky to cut out the shape of a pair of sailor’s trousers, you could make the sun come out. I’m not kidding.Animals exhibit superstitious behaviours, too. I once say a really interesting documentary where a pigeon was trying to be taught to peck a button to get food. They randomized the test so that sometimes pressing the button would work and sometimes it wouldn’t. This resulted in the pigeon spinning around before hitting the button every time, despite it not resulting in food every time, I guess because that chain of events had worked before and he was going to stick with it.

A tradition is something you do regularly. It is a tradition in our family to gather for Thanksgiving.A superstition implies some sort of cause and effect. It is a belief, with no evidence, that one act will cause or deter another. Believing that it is bad luck to walk under a ladder is a superstition (you believe that the space under a ladder has some magical properties that will cause bad things to happen if you enter it). Throwing a pinch of spilled salt over your shoulder will avoid bad luck, for example.My friend says that her grandmother believed that, on a cloudy day, if there were enough blue sky to cut out the shape of a pair of sailor’s trousers, you could make the sun come out. I’m not kidding.Animals exhibit superstitious behaviours, too. I once say a really interesting documentary where a pigeon was trying to be taught to peck a button to get food. They randomized the test so that sometimes pressing the button would work and sometimes it wouldn’t. This resulted in the pigeon spinning around before hitting the button every time, despite it not resulting in food every time, I guess because that chain of events had worked before and he was going to stick with it.Superstition and belief is fascinating stuff, really

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