Culture
Description
1. That complex whole which includes practical artifacts, spiritual and moral beliefs, aesthetic activities and objects and all habits acquired by man as a member of society, and all products of human activity as determined by these habits.
2. The complex whole of the system of concepts and usages, organizations, skills, and instruments by means of which mankind deals with physical, biological, and human nature in satisfaction of its needs.
3. The whole complex of traditional behaviour patterns which has been developed by the human race and is successively learned by each generation, and includes knowledge, belief, art, morals, law, techniques, and methods of communication.
4. The working and integrated summation of the non-instinctive activities of human beings. It is the functionally interrelated, patterned totality of group-accepted and group-transmitted inventions, whether material or non-material.