UCSP MOD 2 Lesson 2 3
UCSP MOD 2 Lesson 2 3
UCSP MOD 2 Lesson 2 3
Introduction:
MACRO VIEW
Sociologists may study human society by focusing on the large
social phenomena or “the big picture”, such a social institutions and
inequality to see how it operates
MICRO VIEW
Sociologists may zero in on the immediate social situation where
people interact with one another or looking at the situational patterns
of social interaction.
1. Historical Approach
-Current and future human and forest landscape conditions are
influenced by the cumulative, unfolding of social-ecological
interactions. Examining past system responses, especially unintended
consequences, can reveal valuable insights that promote learning and
adaption.
2. Structural-Functional Approach
3. Social-Conflict Approach
Concept of Society
Definitions of Society
Elements of Society
1. Social Interaction
2. Social Organization
3. Social Structure
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Introduction
Ethnocentrism
When people find cultural practices and values not their own as
disturbing and threatening, that can be regarded as ethnocentrism. A literal
meaning of ethnocentrism is the regard that one’s own culture and society
is the center of everything and therefore far more superior than others
(Kottak 2012: 39; Eriksen 2001:7). Anthropologists use this term to
describe the opinion that one’s own way of life is natural and correct.
Ethnocentric individuals believe they’re better than the other individuals for
reasons based solely on their heritage. Others would simply call it as cultural
ignorance. It is understandable that people laud and hold importance to the
cultural values that were taught to them by their parents, elders, and other
institutions of their society. The problem is when a person or groups of
people regard their own society’s set of cultural values as the only agreeable,
acceptable, and highly respectable set of convictions. From this perspective,
the practices and institutions of people from other societies are regarded as
inferior, less intelligent, and even vicious. An ethnocentric attitude can be
an obstacle to understanding each other’s culture and foster tensions within
or between societies.
Cultural Relativism
The concept of cultural relativism underscores the idea that the
culture in every society should be understood and regarded on its own
terms.
Societies are qualitatively different from one another, such that each
one has its own “unique inner logic” (Eriksen 2001: 14). Cultural traits can
only be known and valued in the context of the society by which they
emerge and are practiced.
Cultural relativism promotes the idea that a society has to be viewed
from the inside so that inner logic can be better explained. A society’s idea
of a good life will not likely be shared by another society that interprets the
notion of “good” from a sharply different social perspective. In other words,
each society has a different yardstick in appreciating the value of its own
cultural trait. Cultural relativism, however, cannot be regarded as the flip
side of ethnocentrism. The concept of cultural relativism is more analytical
and methodological rather than being a moral principle. Anthropologists
apply the concept of cultural relativity in investigating and comparing
societies without declaring one being better or more preferable to the other.
Moreover, appreciating and accepting the uniqueness of one society’s
cultural trait does not mean that universal human moral traits of right or
wrong no longer apply.
Essential Learning
References:
Eriksen, Thomas Hyland (2001) Small Places, Large Issues: An Introduction to Social and Cultural
Anthropology, 2nd Edition. London: Sterling Press
Gonzalez, M. A. (2016). Anthropology and the study of Culture. In M. A. Gonzalez, Understanding Culture,
Society, and Politics (pp32-36). Makati City: Diwa Learning Systems, Inc.
Gonzalez, M. A. (2016). Sociology and the study of Society. In M. A. Gonzalez, Understanding Culture,
Society, and Politics (pp41-44). Makati City: Diwa Learning Systems, Inc’//