Who makes the following statement about culture? “Culture is a dynamic system of rules, explicit, and implicit, established by g
roups in order to ensure their survival, involving attitudes, values, beliefs, norms, and behaviors, shared by a group but harbored differently by each specific unit within the group, communicated across generations, relatively stable but potential to change across time.”
The answer to this question: Who makes the following statement about culture, would be: David Matsumoto and Linda Juang, in their textbook on psychology: Culture and Psychology.
Explanation:
These two researchers have published several books on psychology, and specifically, on the impact that culture, and cultural background, has on human behavior, human activities and human interaction. There have been several editions published and their emphasis is on inviting students to question traditional beliefs, traditional opinions and theories by learning to understand the vital framework provided by culture, and multicultural experiences, to develop actions and behavior in humans.
Dynamics in music is used to describe the loudness or volume of notes in a musical piece. It is indicated in written or printed form by musical notation also called music dynamics. These notations may be more detailed however. Dynamics of music extend to cover more than loudness of notes such as timbre and tempo.
Like charges repel each other; unlike charges attract. Thus, two negative charges repel one another, while a positive charge attracts a negative charge.
The concept of thinking and intelligence that Louis is confronting in this scenario is <u>roled squema.</u>
Explanation:
A squema is a cognitive structure that helps a person elaborate his own knowledge about the world. A role squema is based on the expectations one has, about how should a person behave undr specific situation depending on the person's roll.
I find the "War Between the States" to be most appropriate because the country was torn in half and fighting eachother. Plus the "War for Southern Independence" gives off a positive connotation in a way that made it seem like the South was in the right (they were not).