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People learn culture. That, we suggest, is culture's essential feature. Many
qualities of human life are transmitted genetically -- an infant's desire for
food, for example, is triggered by physiological characteristics determined
within the human genetic code. An adult's specific desire for milk and cereal
in the morning, on the other hand, cannot be explained genetically; rather,
it is a learned (cultural) response to morning hunger. Culture, as a body of
learned behaviors common to a given human society, acts rather like a template
(ie. it has predictable form and content), shaping behavior and consciousness
within a human society from generation to generation. So culture resides in
all learned behavior and in some shaping template or consciousness prior to
behavior as well (that is, a "cultural template" can be in place prior
to the birth of an individual person).
This primary concept of a shaping template and body of learned behaviors might
be further broken down into the following categories, each of which is an important
element of cultural systems:
Several important principles follow from this definition of culture: