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100

The most powerful symbols are those that make up what?

Language

100

What are norms of great moral significance and are vital to the well-being of a society?

Mores

100
What were the young people of the 1960s who rejected the mainstream society of the time called?

Hippies

100

What are norms that are formally defined and enforced by officials?

Laws

100

What are norms so strong that its violation demands punishment by the group?

Taboos

200

What are ideas about the nature of reality that people base their behavior on?

Beliefs

200

What are genetically inherited patterns of behavior?

Instincts

200

What is the debate over the balance between genetics and environmental factors called?

Nature Vs Nurture

200

What is the study of how biology influences human behavior called?

Sociobiology

200

What are rules that cover customary ways of thinking, feeling, and behaving but lack strong moral overtones?

Folkways

300

What are common cultural traits shared by all societies called?

Cultural Universals

300

What is the feeling of surprise and confusion people may feel when they encounter cultural practices different form their own?

Cultural Shock

300

What type of culture refers to cultural guidelines publicly embraced by members of a society?

Ideal Culture

300

What are rewards and punishments used to encourage conformity to norms?

Sanctions

300

What type of culture involves beliefs, ideas, and knowledge?

Nonmaterial

400

Term culture refers to what 5 things in a society?

Knowledge, Language, Values/Beliefs, Customs, and Physical Objects

400

When people judge others in terms of their own cultural standards it is referred to as what?

Ethnocentrism 

400

What is a subculture that is deliberately and consciously opposed to certain central beliefs?

Counter Culture

400

What type of culture refers to cultural patterns practiced by traditional groups often in isolation?

Folk Culture

400

What type of culture refers to cultural patterns what are widespread among society's population?

Pop Culture

500

Explain how the 3 Theoretical perspectives most widely used by sociologists explain the role of culture:

Functionalism -  Culture is a system for meeting basic needs.

Conflict Theory - Culture helps maintain the privileges and positions of powerful groups in society by reinforcing dominate ideology.

Symbolic Interactionism - Culture is transmitted and perpetuated through social interaction.

500

What are the three factors that sociologists have identified that cause change in social norms and cultures over time?

Inventions

Discovery

Diffusion

500

Name the 6 Values that have traditionally guided the daily lives of most people in the U.S.

1. Achievement and Success

2. Activity and Work

3. Efficiency and Practicality

4. Equality 

5. Democracy

6. Group Superiority 

500

Name 4 cultural universals that American anthropologist George Murdock identified for any society. 

Sports, Cooking, Courtship, division of labor, education, etiquette, funeral rites, family, government, Hospitality, Housing, inheritance, joking, language, medicine, mourning, music, property rights, religions rites, sexual restrictions, status difference, and tool making.

500

5 factors that promote cultural diversity in the U.S. and other countries are:

Immigration, Globalism, better/faster communication, travel, cultural relevance

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