翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Cultural Vistas
・ Cultural y Deportiva Leonesa
・ Cultural y Deportiva Leonesa B
・ Cultural Zionism
・ Cultural Zones of India
・ Cultural-historical activity theory
・ Cultural-historical psychology
・ Culturalism
・ Culturalist psychoanalysts
・ Culturally Authentic Pictorial Lexicon
・ Culturally modified tree
・ Culturally relevant teaching
・ Cultural·es
・ Culturama
・ Culturcide
Culture
・ Culture & Expo Center Station
・ Culture & Science City
・ Culture (band)
・ Culture (Bottom)
・ Culture (disambiguation)
・ Culture (musician)
・ Culture (US band)
・ Culture 2000
・ Culture and Anarchy
・ Culture and Arts Capital of the Turkic World
・ Culture and Conflict in the Middle East
・ Culture and Heritage
・ Culture and Imperialism
・ Culture and Media Institute


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Culture : ウィキペディア英語版
Culture

Culture () is, in the words of E.B. Tylor, "that complex whole which includes knowledge, belief, art, morals, law, custom and any other capabilities and habits acquired by man as a member of society."
''Cambridge English Dictionary'' states that culture is, "the way of life, especially the general customs and beliefs, of a particular group of people at a particular time."〔name="dict_cult">〕
Terror Management Theory posits that culture is a series of activities and worldviews that provide humans with the illusion of being individuals of value in a world meaning—raising themselves above the merely physical aspects of existence, in order to deny the animal insignificance and death that Homo Sapiens became aware of when he acquired a larger brain.〔Thirty Years of Terror Management Theory: From Genesis to Revelation Tom Pyszczynski, Sheldon Solomon†, Jeff Greenberg‡ http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0065260115000052〕
As a defining aspect of what it means to be human, culture is a central concept in anthropology, encompassing the range of phenomena that are transmitted through social learning in human societies. The word is used in a general sense as the evolved ability to categorize and represent experiences with symbols and to act imaginatively and creatively. This ability arose with the evolution of behavioral modernity in humans around 50,000 years ago. This capacity is often thought to be unique to humans, although some other species have demonstrated similar, though much less complex abilities for social learning. It is also used to denote the complex networks of practices and accumulated knowledge and ideas that is transmitted through social interaction and exist in specific human groups, or cultures, using the plural form. Some aspects of human behavior, such as language, social practices such as kinship, gender and marriage, expressive forms such as art, music, dance, ritual, religion, and technologies such as cooking, shelter, clothing are said to be cultural universals, found in all human societies. The concept material culture covers the physical expressions of culture, such as technology, architecture and art, whereas the immaterial aspects of culture such as principles of social organization (including, practices of political organization and social institutions), mythology, philosophy, literature (both written and oral), and science make up the intangible cultural heritage of a society.
In the humanities, one sense of culture, as an attribute of the individual, has been the degree to which they have cultivated a particular level of sophistication, in the arts, sciences, education, or manners. The level of cultural sophistication has also sometimes been seen to distinguish civilizations from less complex societies. Such hierarchical perspectives on culture are also found in class-based distinctions between a high culture of the social elite and a low culture, popular culture or folk culture of the lower classes, distinguished by the stratified access to cultural capital. In common parlance, culture is often used to refer specifically to the symbolic markers used by ethnic groups to distinguish themselves visibly from each other such as body modification, clothing or jewelry. Mass culture refers to the mass-produced and mass mediated forms of consumer culture that emerged in the 20th century. Some schools of philosophy, such as Marxism and critical theory, have argued that culture is often used politically as a tool of the elites to manipulate the lower classes and create a false consciousness, such perspectives common in the discipline of cultural studies. In the wider social sciences, the theoretical perspective of cultural materialism holds that human symbolic culture arises from the material conditions of human life, as humans create the conditions for physical survival, and that the basis of culture is found in evolved biological dispositions.
When used as a count noun "a culture", is the set of customs, traditions and values of a society or community, such as an ethnic group or nation. In this sense, multiculturalism is a concept that values the peaceful coexistence and mutual respect between different cultures inhabiting the same territory. Sometimes "culture" is also used to describe specific practices within a subgroup of a society, a subculture (e.g. "bro culture"), or a counter culture. Within cultural anthropology, the ideology and analytical stance of cultural relativism holds that cultures cannot easily be objectively ranked or evaluated because any evaluation is necessarily situated within the value system of a given culture.
==Etymology==

The modern term "culture" is based on a term used by the Ancient Roman orator Cicero in his ''Tusculanae Disputationes'', where he wrote of a cultivation of the soul or ''"cultura animi"'', using an agricultural metaphor for the development of a philosophical soul, understood teleologically as the highest possible ideal for human development. Samuel Pufendorf took over this metaphor in a modern context, meaning something similar, but no longer assuming that philosophy was man's natural perfection. His use, and that of many writers after him "''refers to all the ways in which human beings overcome their original barbarism, and through artifice, become fully human''".
Philosopher Edward S. Casey (1996) describes: "The very word ''culture'' meant "place tilled" in Middle English, and the same word goes back to Latin ''colere'', "to inhabit, care for, till, worship" and ''cultus'', "A cult, especially a religious one." To be cultural, to have a culture, is to inhabit a place sufficiently intensely to cultivate it — to be responsible for it, to respond to it, to attend to it caringly."〔https://read.amazon.com/?asin=B00DG8M7EU 〕
Culture described by Velkley:〔
... originally meant the cultivation of the soul or mind, acquires most of its later modern meanings in the writings of the 18th-century German thinkers, who were on various levels developing Rousseau's criticism of "modern liberalism and Enlightenment". Thus a contrast between "culture" and "civilization" is usually implied in these authors, even when not expressed as such.


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