Sociology, asked by khalidahmad7919, 1 month ago

Culture is not inborn". Explain the statement with examples from your own experience

Answers

Answered by tejalbhayani32
4

Answer:

Culture is the patterns of learned and shared behavior and beliefs of a particular social, ethnic, or age group. It can also be described as the complex whole of collective human beliefs with a structured stage of civilization that can be specific to a nation or time period. Humans in turn use culture to adapt and transform the world they live in.

Ashanti flag, note the golden stool

This idea of Culture can be seen in the way that we describe the Ashanti, an African tribe located in central Ghana. The Ashanti live with their families as you might assume but the meaning of how and why they live with whom is an important aspect of Ashanti culture. In the Ashanti culture, the family and the mother’s clan are most important. A child is said to inherit the father’s soul or spirit (ntoro) and from the mother, a child receives flesh and blood (mogya). This relates them more closely to the mother’s clan. The Ashanti live in an extended family. The family lives in various homes or huts that are set up around a courtyard. The head of the household is usually the oldest brother that lives there. He is chosen by the elders. He is called either Father or Housefather and everyone in the household obeys him.[1]

The anthropological study of culture can be organized along two persistent and basic themes: Diversity and Change. An individual’s upbringing, and environment (or culture) is what makes them diverse from other cultures. It is the differences between all cultures and sub-cultures of the worlds regions. People’s need to adapt and transform to physical, biological and cultural forces to survive represents the second theme, Change. Culture generally changes for one of two reasons: selective transmission or to meet changing needs. This means that when a village or culture is met with new challenges for example a loss of a food source, they must change the way they live. This could mean almost anything to the culture, including possible forced redistribution of, or relocation from ancestral domains due to external and/or internal forces. And an anthropologist would look at that and study their ways to learn from them.

Culture is:

•Learned through active teaching, and passive habitus.

•Shared meaning that it defines a group and meets common needs.

•Patterned meaning that that there is a recourse of similar ideas. Related cultural beliefs and practices show up repeatedly in different areas of social life.

•Adaptive which helps individuals meet needs across variable environments.

•Symbolic which means that there are simple and arbitrary signs that represent something else, something more.

Answered by fathimapathuz0
15

Culture is a social phenomenon. ... Culture is learned as well as acquired from the ancestors. It is not inborn and instinctive like racial characteristics which are genetically transmitted. A human infant is quite helpless at the time of birth.Culture is the patterns of learned and shared behavior and beliefs of a particular social, ethnic, or age group. It can also be described as the complex whole of collective human beliefs with a structured stage of civilization that can be specific to a nation or time period.For example, we may learn when particular holidays occur in school, like Christmas is always on December 25th.

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