Chapter 1: Introduction Flashcards
accessibility universal
a cognitive tool that exists in all cultures, is used to solve the same problem in all cultures, and is accessible to the same degree across cultures (example: social facilitation)
functional universal
a cognitive tool that exists in multiple cultures, is used to solve the same problem across cultures, but is more accessible to people from some cultures as opposed to others (example: costly punishment)
existential universal
a cognitive tool that exists in multiple cultures, although it is not sued to solve the same problem across those cultures nor is it equally accessible across those cultures (example: motivational responses to failure and success)
nonuniversal
a cognitive tools that do not exist in all cultures (example: abacus)
ethnocentrism
the practice of judging people from other cultures by the standards of our own culture
Russian cultural-historical school
school of thought that argued that people interact with their environments through tools or human-made ideas that have been passed to them across history.