Papers of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology And Ethnology volume Vol 47 No 1

Cover Papers of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology And Ethnology volume Vol 47 No 1
Papers of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology And Ethnology volume Vol 47 No 1
Peabody Museum of American Archaeology And Ethnolo
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. . That things so diverse as hoeing corn, singing the blues, wearing a shirr, speaking English, and being a Baptist are involved. Perhaps a shorter way of designating the content of culture is the negative way of telling what is excluded from it. Put this wav around, culture might be defined as all the activities and non-physical products of human person- alities that are not automatically reflex or in- stinctive. That in turn means, in biological and psycholojjical parlance, that culture cons...ists of conditioned or learned activities (plus the manufactured results of these); and the idea of learning brintrs us back again to what is socially transmitted, wh. Nc is received from tradition, what "is acquired bv man as a member of societies. " So perhaps kow- it comes to be is really more distinctive of culture than what it is. It certainly is more easily expressed specifically. .
20. Bidney, 1949: 4~o.
Modern ethnology has shown that all his- torical societies have had cultures or traditional ways of behavior and thought in conformit\- with which they have patterned their lives.


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