Fulltext results:
- 4.3.2
- 8)? These are, I argue, symptoms of a particular culture of death in which individuals are forced to be fr
- 4.3.1
- this is the point of this week's topic: One's own culture will teach people to ignore and suppress parts of... , however, is to ask "Why don't I? Why doesn't my culture tell me that I am implicated in other people's de... sence of others is familiar to most people across cultures but is highly elaborated as *hinimaya* in Auhela... pocognized experience for people in individualist cultures. They can see it if they think about it, but the
- 4.2.2
- She hears: > I wonder what it is like to have a culture. ## Today, Auhelawa has two cultural scrip... this is to look to an idealized version of other cultures, whom they imagine find authentic meaning in dea... , it can never change. And it has changed because cultures are always changing. ## Cultural scripts a
- 4.2.1
- is end of an individual biological organism. ## Cultures contain contradictions Cultures are not dogmas; they are not uniform or unequivocal or absolute. Cultures contain [[:identity_and_contradiction|contradict... the others' life (Fitt and Freeman 1983, 29). A culture A is both A and not-A Societies are made of up m
- 3.1.1
- rlying many if not all transactions ## Western culture and social reality At the risk of oversimplifyin... jor division in types of society. ### "Western" culture * Western culture values individualism. * Children are taught to be individuals. * Society and its ru
- 4.1.1
- ## "Magical" explanations of misfortune Many cultures throughout the world find invisible causes for o