Matching
Match the following:
Premises:
The sociologist who charted core values that strongly influence culture.
Examining the relationship between a culture and its total environment.
Feelings of confusion and disorientation that occur when a person encounters a very different culture.
Mental blueprints that serve as guidelines for group behavior.
Asks that we evaluate other cultures according to their standards, not ours.
The sociologist who noted "the globalization of everything leads to the globalization of nothing."
Norms that people consider essential to the proper working of society.
This theorist developed the concept of the Protestant ethic to describe thrift, hard work, and rugged individualism.
Assertions about the nature of reality.
People who live in a specific geographic territory, interact with one another, and share many elements of a common culture.
The biologist who wrote On the Origin of Species.
A society in which hand tools are used to grow domesticated crops. Page Ref: 56
A society that relies on machines and advanced technology to produce and distribute food, information, goods, and services.
Expectations and rules for proper conduct that guide behavior of group members.
Shared ideas about what is socially desirable.
Responses:
industrial society
nonmaterial culture
society
cultural ecological approach
George Ritzer
Max Weber
norms
Charles Darwin
horticultural society
beliefs
values
culture shock
Robin Williams
cultural relativism
mores
Correct Answer:
Premises:
Responses:
The sociologist who charted core values that strongly influence culture.
Examining the relationship between a culture and its total environment.
Feelings of confusion and disorientation that occur when a person encounters a very different culture.
Mental blueprints that serve as guidelines for group behavior.
Asks that we evaluate other cultures according to their standards, not ours.
The sociologist who noted "the globalization of everything leads to the globalization of nothing."
Norms that people consider essential to the proper working of society.
This theorist developed the concept of the Protestant ethic to describe thrift, hard work, and rugged individualism.
Assertions about the nature of reality.
People who live in a specific geographic territory, interact with one another, and share many elements of a common culture.
The biologist who wrote On the Origin of Species.
A society in which hand tools are used to grow domesticated crops. Page Ref: 56
A society that relies on machines and advanced technology to produce and distribute food, information, goods, and services.
Expectations and rules for proper conduct that guide behavior of group members.
Shared ideas about what is socially desirable.
Premises:
The sociologist who charted core values that strongly influence culture.
Examining the relationship between a culture and its total environment.
Feelings of confusion and disorientation that occur when a person encounters a very different culture.
Mental blueprints that serve as guidelines for group behavior.
Asks that we evaluate other cultures according to their standards, not ours.
The sociologist who noted "the globalization of everything leads to the globalization of nothing."
Norms that people consider essential to the proper working of society.
This theorist developed the concept of the Protestant ethic to describe thrift, hard work, and rugged individualism.
Assertions about the nature of reality.
People who live in a specific geographic territory, interact with one another, and share many elements of a common culture.
The biologist who wrote On the Origin of Species.
A society in which hand tools are used to grow domesticated crops. Page Ref: 56
A society that relies on machines and advanced technology to produce and distribute food, information, goods, and services.
Expectations and rules for proper conduct that guide behavior of group members.
Shared ideas about what is socially desirable.
Responses:
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