1/12
Looks like no tags are added yet.
Name | Mastery | Learn | Test | Matching | Spaced |
|---|
No study sessions yet.
sociological subsystem
The totality of expected and accepted patterns of interpersonal relations and social rituals that characterize a culture, along with the ideological and technological types.
technological subsystem
The complex of material objects together with the techniques of their use by means of which people carry out their productive activities and that characterize a culture, along with the ideological and sociological types.
cultural convergence
The tendency for cultures to become more alike as they increasingly share technology and organizational structures in a modern world united by improved developments to transportation and communication.
mentifact
A central element of a culture expressing its values and beliefs, including language, religion, folklore, artistic traditions, and the like. An element in the ideological subsystem of culture. (in the head of an individual and shapes their worldview)
culture hearth
A nuclear area within which an advanced and distinctive set of culture traits, ideas, and technologies develops and from which there is diffusion of those characteristics and the cultural landscape features they imply. (they are the birthplace of cultural traits in which they influence other cultures and acts as the source of innovation for surrounding areas)
sociofact
A rule, custom, or institution that links individuals and groups as part of a culture, including family structure and political, educational, and religious institutions. It’s also an element in the sociological subsystem of culture.
multilinear evolution
A concept of independent but parallel cultural development advanced by the anthropologist Julian Steward (1902-1972) to explain cultural similarities among widely separated peoples existing in similar environments but who could not have benefited from shared experiences, borrowed ideas, or diffused technologies. (connected to independent inventions)
cultural integration
The interconnectedness of all aspects of a culture: no part can be altered without creating an impact on other components of the culture.
carrying capacity
The maximum population numbers that an area can support on a continuing basis without experiencing unacceptable deterioration; for humans, the numbers supportable by an area’s known and used resources-including agricultural and energy resources.
domestication
The successful transformation of plant or animal species from a wild state to a condition of dependency on human management, usually with distinct physical change from wild forebears (< OG, wild ancestor)
ideological subsystem
The complex of ideas, beliefs, knowledge, and means of their communication that characterize a culture, along with the technological and sociological types.
cultural divergence
The likelihood or tendency for cultures to become increasingly dissimilar with the passage of time.
artifact
A material manifestation of culture, including tools, housing systems of land use, clothing, and the like. An element in the material/technological subsystem of culture.