Social Sciences, asked by Shramikaa, 10 months ago

Long question : How society is developed?
6 marks

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Answered by Anonymous
1

Answer:

\huge\blue {\mathfrak{Bonjour  Mate!}}

How do societies develop?

> A society develops culturally when womanhood ensures their effective role in and off the house. A society develops spiritually when a mother a daughter a sister stick to values and principles. A society develops politically when the women leaders take charge of the affairs.

Answered by FanzyRacer
1

Answer:

Most basically socieities are organized life in groups. For a human society, ( as opposed to ants or wolves , for example) there needs to be shared culture. Culture is how you do things, how you define things, and how you communicate those concepts to each other.

One of the famous ways of describing how societies develop is the bands tribes chiefdom states continuum. Elman Service developed this concept, where the political organization is combined with the social organization and economic base. Social organization includes kinship ( families) and communities, economics includes the broadest sense of that term- think food water and technology ( tools) rather than money and markets. Renfrew and Bahn have applied it to the archaeological record. Most introductory 4 field anthropology textbooks will include this organization to a greater or lesser degree. The 4 fields are cultural anthropology where you study culture- how different people concieve of the world and the relationships of people - linguistics- how people communicate with symbolic language - how concepts are formed in the mind and communicated to others- archaeology- the study of past human cultures through their material remains, and physical ( or biological) anthropology the study of the bearers of culture- human beings.

it is one of the main themes of the science of anthropology. The basic outline can be seen in Services format- simplest societies being hunter gatherer Bands; they forage in nature to find food, and live in groups of about 30 people in very large ranges. You then get tribes- collections of related groups, with some form of food production, which allows for a higher population - which gives more involved needs for social organization - to Chiefdoms, where the higher population numbers require more elaborate social organization, and ranks enter in to the social organization - people are very egalitarian in bands and tribes. You then get to higher population numbers, and food production moves from gardens and herds of animals to intensive agriculture - including ploughs and irrigation- which support a lot of people but require a huge network of people working to maintain the system…which leads to the state, the level of organization most of the world lives in today…with lots of hierarchy and differential access to resources. You need to take an introduction to anthropology course or read an anthropology textbook to get a better idea. You could look up Renfrew and Bahn or Elman Service for a start. Good luck and enjoy!

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