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  • ...n organized group of people associated together for religious, benevolent, cultural, scientific, political, patriotic, or other purposes. .../www.mc.maricopa.edu/dept/d10/asb/anthro2003/glues/model_complex.html] The Cultural Evolution of Civilizations].
    13 KB (1,862 words) - 02:37, 13 December 2020
  • ...imary methods, and the text that is written as a result of the practice of anthropology and its elements. ...Cultural relativism|cultural relativity]] and the use of findings to frame cultural critiques. This has been particularly prominent in the United States, from
    55 KB (7,711 words) - 23:45, 12 December 2020
  • ...ve reputations and so maintain widespread indirect reciprocity[2] Indirect reciprocity is defined here as "I help you and somebody else helps me". Gossip has also ...n, intimate in style, personal and domestic in scope and setting, a female cultural event which springs from and perpetuates the restrictions of the female rol
    17 KB (2,601 words) - 00:37, 13 December 2020
  • ...tions that arise from these networks to do things for each other (norms of reciprocity)."[https://www.hks.harvard.edu/saguaro/primer.htm SAGUARO SEMINAR - Civic E ===Anthropology===
    37 KB (5,356 words) - 23:45, 12 December 2020
  • ...es of social conformity significantly shape moral decisions, but deny that cultural norms and customs define moral behavior. The phenomenon of '[[reciprocity]]' in [[nature]] is seen by evolutionary biologists as one way to begin to
    34 KB (4,967 words) - 01:21, 13 December 2020
  • The cultural traditions of [[marriage]] and [[betrothal]] are the most basic customs in ...some level. In ''Men Are From Mars, Women Are From Venus'' Gray argued for reciprocity, by focusing on gender differences. In this way he popularized the view tha
    32 KB (5,165 words) - 02:32, 13 December 2020
  • ...power in politics which entails theoretical views similar to notions of [[cultural hegemony]]. These 3 dimensions of power are today often considered definin ...hey are capable of transcendence, but they are compelled into immanence by cultural and social conditions that deny them that transcendence (see Beauvoir, chap
    67 KB (10,041 words) - 02:37, 13 December 2020