Personal Story: Cultural Perspective What is Culture? Culture is a mistaken or correct concept, a concept that is acceptable to our society. Culture provides guidance to us and leads us to "the right path" to help us understand what we are all around. There are various cultures in the world. Many of them are similar in certain respects, but they are quite different.
The meaning of this cultural point of view is diverse and important. First, cultural conflicts may be more painful than ideological conflicts - individuals and society. Consider, for example, the difference between the apostasy of Communists like Whitaker Chambers and the apostasy of Muslims like Ayaan Hirsi Ali. The former obviously pursues the way of pain and bitterness and considers the ideological relationship with betrayal as an old comrades, but it is the latter abandonment and the accusation of her own father and mother's basic beliefs and practices It is more painful. And the complexity must look light and helpless.
Cultural views ultimately focus on unique cultural differences that make sense for certain members of society. This is often seen as a view of "people inside." This view comes from the concept of being immersed in a specific culture, but emic participants are not necessarily a member of culture or society. Studies done from an emic point of view usually contain more detailed and culturally rich information than the work done from the etic point of view. Because observers are based in the culture of the research that anticipates the future, you can get a deeper understanding of social practices and beliefs that may otherwise be overlooked. However, the view of emic is declining. The purpose of the emic point of view is to provide an explanatory and exhaustive report on how rituals, beliefs and traditions in culture understand their rituals.