List the positive and negative aspects of our tradition. 4 points each.
Answers
Answer:
Negative effects can include miscommunication, creation of barriers, and dysfunctional adaptation behaviors. Positive effects can include building a sound knowledge base with in-house talent, which can make for smoother integration of the organization into foreign cultures.
Explanation:
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Answer:
ANSWER IS EXPLAINED BELOW
Explanation:
Years ago I read the sentence, “How much the people of science know about the things they don’t understand.”1 It stretches our imagination to describe the interactions of genetics, epigenetics, and nurture that produce a unique human, but just as daunting is understanding the cultural and religious traditions that this unique human navigates. Tradition is the DNA of our beliefs, but then each person modifies that complex for his or her own unique environment. In essence, both the individual and his or her environment are so unique that risks exist in our generalizations. For example, within a single religious denomination is a spectrum of beliefs, and we repeatedly see individuals discard those beliefs in a moment when presented with opportunities involving money, sex, politics, or power. On the public health side, we also see great variations in what practitioners regard as “best practices.” Beware the attempt to label. Nonetheless, we are forced into the role of generalizations as we attempt to make adequate decisions with inadequate information.
C. P. Snow famously said that the gap between science and the humanities could not be bridged,2 but public health does that daily. When AIDS was recognized in the early 1980s, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention needed social scientists and therefore sought the advice of anthropologists, sociologists, theologians, ethicists, and others. Ralph Waldo Emerson said that we learn geology the day after an earthquake.3 Ebola and AIDS showed that we learn better public health techniques because of disasters. That is how science works.