A society, or a human society, is a group of people related to each other through
persistent relations, or a large social grouping sharing the same geographical or virtual territory, subject to the same political authority and dominant cultural expectations. Human societies are characterized by patterns of relationships (social relations) between individuals who share a distinctive culture and institutions a given society may be described as the sum total of such relationships among its constituent members. !n the social sciences, a larger society often evinces stratification and"or dominance patterns in subgroups. !nsofar as it is collaborative, a society can enable its members to benefit in ways that would not otherwise be possible on an individual basis both individual and social (common) benefits can thus be distinguished, or in many cases found to overlap. #ulture, on the other hand, is an important part of our lives. !t tells us how to cooperate among groups of people and how to survive as a species. #ulture is defined as a body of learned behaviors shared by individuals within a society. !t is made up of shared values, norms, and beliefs as well as material objects such as tools, automobiles, televisions, shoes, and anything else that is made by humans. $he %atin root of the word cultura means &to cultivate.' (e humans shape or cultivate the world around us to suit our needs. #ulture is something that we cannot live without. $his module intends to introduce concepts, theories, and perspectives vital in the understanding of society and culture. An in depth discussion of basic social institutions forming the social structure will be emphasized in order to increase the awareness regarding the current issues confronting the present social structure. !n so doing individual and collective functions in confronting such issues will be realized. )urthermore, a special discussion will be devoted on family planning, ta*ing into account family planning and reproductive health concepts and issues that are significant agendum of the society+s project on social order. DIOSDADO P. ZULUETA , CONTENTS #HA-$./ !. !0$/123#$!10 4 0ature and 5eginnings of 6ociology and Anthropology 4 -erspective6 in 3nderstanding the 6ociety 7 #HA-$./ !!. 61#!.$8 ,4 6ocio9cultural .volution: $ransformation of 6ocieties ,4 6ocial ;roups and 1rganizations ,7 3nderstanding 6ocialization 4< #HA-$./ !!!. #3%$3/. => (hat is #ulture? => #omponents of #ulture =@ #haracteristics of #ulture A, !ssues in 3nderstanding #ulture AB #HA-$./ !C. 5A6!# 61#!A% !06$!$3$!106 AA /eligion and 6ociety A> ;overnment and %aw >< .conomy >, .ducation >4 Darriage and )amily >= #HA-$./ C. DA//!A;., )AD!%8 -%A00!0; >> A02 /.6-106!5%. -A/.0$H112 Darriage >> /eproductive Health @> )amily -lanning @7 /esponsible -arenthood 7A B CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION Objectives: %earn about the nature and beginnings of 6ociology and Anthropology and develop better perspective in understanding the 6ociety such as the #onflict -erspective, 6ymbolic9 !nteractionist -erspective and 6tructural9)unctional Analysis. A. Nature a! "e#ii#s $% S$ci$&$#' a! At(r$)$&$#' $he central concern of 6ociety and #ulture is the interaction of persons, societies, cultures, environments and time. 6ociety and #ulture draws on cross9disciplinary concepts and social research methodologies from anthropology, communication, cultural studies, media studies, philosophy, psychology, social ecology and sociology. 6ociety and #ulture has direct relevance to the immediate needs of students and to their future lives by enabling students to develop understanding of: themselves their own society and culture the societies and cultures of others. Nature Anthropology is the study of human*ind, in all times and places. !n other words, it is the science of man which denotes the natural history of man*ind. !n the general classification of *nowledge it stands as the highest section of zoology or the science of animals, itself the highest section of biology or the science of living beings. $o anthropology contribute various sciences, which hold their own independent places in the field of *nowledge. $hus anatomy and physiology display the structure and functions of the human body, while psychology investigates the operations of the human mind. -hilology deals with the general principles of language, as well as with the relations between the languages of particular races and nations. .thics or moral 4 science treats manEs duty or rules or conduct toward his fellow men. %astly, under the names of sociology and the science of culture, are considered the origin and development of arts and sciences, opinions, beliefs, customs, laws, institutions generally among man*ind, their course in time being partly mar*ed out by the direct record of history, while beyond the historical limit our information is continued by inferences from relics of early ages and remote districts, to interpret which is the tas* of pre9historic archaeology and geology. 0ot only are these various sciences concerned largely with man, but several among them have in fact suffered by the almost entire exclusion of other animals from their scheme. !t is undoubted that comparative anatomy and physiology, by treating the human species as one member of a long series of related organism, have gained a higher and more perfect understanding of man himself and his place in the universe than could have been gained by the narrower investigation of his species by and for itself. !t is to be regretted that hitherto certain other sciences 99 psychology, ethics, and even philology and sociology9have so little followed so profitable an example. 0o doubt the phenomena of intellect appear in vastly higher and more complete organization in man than in beings below him in the scale of nature, that beasts and birds only attain to language in its lower rudiments, and that only the germs of moral tendency and social law are discernible among the lower animals. 8et though the mental and moral interval between man and the nearest animals may be vast, the brea* is not absolute, and the investigation of the laws of reason and instinct throughout the zoological system, which is already casting some scattered rays of light on the study of manEs highest organization, may be destined henceforth to throw brighter illumination into its very recesses. 0ow this condition of things, as well as the accepted order in which the sciences have arranged themselves by their mode of growth, ma*e it desirable that anthropology should not too ambitiously strive to include within itself the sciences which provide so much of its wealth, but that each science should pursue its own subject through the whole range of living beings, rendering to anthropology an account of so much of its results as concerns man. 6uch results it is the office of anthropology to collect and co9ordinance, so as to elaborate as completely as may be the synopsis of manEs bodily and mental nature, and the theory of his whole course of life and action from his first appearance on earth. As will be seen from the following brief summary, the information to be thus brought together form contributing sciences is widely different both in accuracy and in soundness. (hile much of the descriptive detail is already clear and well filled in, the general principles of its order are still but vaguely to be F discerned, and as our view Guits the comparatively distinct region near ourselves the prospect fades more and more into the dimness of conjecture. 6ociology, on the other hand, is defined as the scientific study of human society and human interaction. 6ociologists are interested in many different aspects of society such as culture, socialization, criminology, social inequality, social groups, organizations, social change, and social institutions (and the list could go on and on). !n order for you to understand more about human society, you should first become acGuainted with the discipline of sociology. 6ociology is the study of the populace in various groupings and settings. !t involves the systematic examination of human social activity, from everyday face9to9face encounters to the movements of civilizations throughout history. 3nli*e disciplines that focus on a single aspect of society, sociology stresses the complex relationships governing all dimensions of social life, including the economy, state, family, religion, science, social ineGuality, culture and consciousness. !ts inGuiry is guided by several theoretical traditions and grounded in the empirical observation of social reality. (hile the experiences of modern, (estern societies gave rise to formal sociological inGuiry, the insights to be gained from the discipline are not limited to this realm. )or example, sociology has particular relevance for understanding global change, as much of the world engages in its own process of modernization. Doreover, sociologists maintain that their perspective, as well as many of their insights, is generalizable beyond the specific historical context in which they were first conceived. 6ociology is characterized as a discipline by several distinct modes of inGuiry. )irst and foremost, sociology emphasizes human sociality as central to its pursuit. !n this view, human action is to be understood within a web of social relationships and broader structures. -articular studies may focus on intimate, face9to9face interaction or on the movement of entire civilizations through history, but all sociology views human action in context. !n this way, sociology distinguishes itself from psychology and some forms of political philosophy that considers the autonomous individual to be a meaningful unit of analysis. 6ociology sees humans as fundamentally social. = 6ociological inGuiry is holistic in maintaining that human action can be understood only by lin*ing it organically to the whole of social life. 6ocial theories are central to sociological investigation, in part, because they provide comprehensive statements regarding the connections among the various facets of social life. (hile particular theories may emphasize certain forces (e.g., economic, cultural) as having greater significance in shaping society, as a discipline sociology see*s to understand the relationship among these forces within social life as a whole. !n this way sociology may be distinguished from disciplines li*e economics and political science that focus on a particular dimension of social life as the center of their inGuiry. 6ociological inGuiry is analytical and structural. 6ociology does not accept at face value common sense understandings or publicly stated positions about society rather, it see*s to probe beneath the surface for the actual dynamics. $he political implications that particular sociologists draw from such a critical understanding may vary from conservative to radical, but critiGue is common to all sociological analysis. 6ociology demands empirical evidence that lin*s sociological ideas to lived experience. 6ociologists employ a wide variety of techniGues to collect and analyze the data of human experience, but all sociological *nowledge must be grounded in some form of empirical or historical reality. !n its demand for empirical foundations, sociology is appropriately regarded as a HscienceH99whether it is as an interpretive science concerned with meaning of social events and cultural values, as a historical science concerned with social institutions and structures, or as a positivistic science concerned with discovering explanatory laws of human behavior. )inally, sociology is a morally engaged discipline. $he substance of sociological inGuiry has direct relevance for ethical issues regarding the human condition. 6ociologists differ in whether or not they maintain that sociological inGuiry can or should serve as a basis for establishing moral truths. 0evertheless, the systematic investigation of what is in our society, particularly those aspects of society that we identify as social problems, naturally raises ethical Guestions about how society should be. A distinctive aspect of sociology is the study of the conflicts and contradictions between social values and ideals, on the one hand, and social structures and reality on the other. !n this way, sociology provides an important bridge between A the objective inGuiry of the natural sciences and the morally engaged approach common to the humanities. As a discipline practiced by trained professionals, sociology brea*s down into several subfields, reflecting the special interests of its practitioners. $he American 6ociological Association identifies several sections, many with their own publications and sessions at national professional meetings99religion, family, medical sociology, theory, and so on. $ypically, upper9 level courses in sociology programs are organized to reflect these interests. "e#ii# $he history of anthropology goes bac* to the days of discoveries and explorations from the fifteenth to the eighteenth centuries and to the accounts of early (estern explorers, missionaries, and colonial officials of the strange behavior and beliefs of people they had come in contact with. 2iscoveries of flint tools and other artifacts in )rance and other parts of .urope in the early nineteenth century gave evidence of the existence of man a million years ago. $hese discoveries happened at a time when advances in chemistry and physics were made, arousing an interest in scientific inGuiry (Haviland, ,7>@). Dodern anthropology in both its physical and cultural aspects started only around the twentieth century. 1n the other hand, sociology, considered one of the youngest of the social sciences, was developed by Auguste #omte around the middle of the nineteenth century. #omte believed that the methods and techniGues of the natural sciences could also be applied to the study of society. He coined the term &sociology' to designate the new science, a term derived from the %atin word socius, meaning &society in interaction,' and the ;ree* word logos, meaning &study.' 1ther pioneers were Herbert 6pencer, Iarl Darx, and )erdinand $oellies, who were also armchair philosophers. 0ot until the time of .mile 2ur*heim, ;eorge 6immel, and Dax (eber in .urope, and eventually #harles H. #ooley, /obert .. -ar*, and (.!. $homas in the 3nited 6tates was empirical investigation used in the study of social phenomena. 2ur*heim laid the foundation for modern sociology by using empirical investigation in the study of suicide in )rance, the division of labor in society, and the elementary forms of religious life. > 6ociological and anthropological theories were developed to explain various social phenomena. 6ome were divergent, but the theories eventually converged on some common grounds. $hese ideas were diffused in .urope, in the Americas, and Asia. .ventually, the disciplines of sociology and anthropology were introduced in the -hilippine colleges and universities. Deve&$)*et i t(e P(i&i))ies Anthropology started as a practical activity of colonizers in the service of #hristianity and the 6panish ;overnment. .thnographic data were provided by the early chroniclers li*e Pi#a%etta, L$arca, P&acecia, and Fr. C(iri$ who wrote the early culture and society in the rediscovered archipelago which was named &)ilipinas' in honor of Iing -hilip !! of 6pain. )renchman Alfred Darche led archeological explorations in ,7 th century. !t was followed by the American government which became interested in the various ethnic groups in the country. .thnological surveys in the -hilippines replaced the 5ureau of 0on9#hristian $ribes. Ot&e' H. "e'er (,7,F) elevated anthropology as an academic discipline at the Uiversit' $% t(e P(i&i))ies. !t was offered as one of the courses in the department of history, and later on, merged with sociology. Anthropology prospered as a distinct course in -hilippines schools. 6chools who have doctorate degree in the early years were Uiversit' $% Sa Car&$s (#ebu), Atee$ De +ai&a Uiversit', and ,avier Uiversit' (#agayan 2e 1ro #ity). Fr. -a&eti +ari introduced sociology in the -hilippines in ,@7A as a course on criminology at the Uiversit' $% Sat$ T$*as. !n ,7,7, 6ociology was introduced at Si&i*a Uiversit' and the T(e$&$#ica& Se*iar'. Sera%i +acarai# was the first )ilipino to receive a doctorate degree in sociology in ,747. &!ntroduction to 6ociology' was the first text in the 3niversity of the -hilippines written by 6erafin Dacaraig. 6ociologists after Dacaraig were: @ .ua Rui/ J offered courses in social wor* in the 3niversity of the -hilippines Pr$%. +arce&$ Ta#c$ J succeeded 2r. Dacaraig F&$ra Dia/ Cat)usa J invited to teach sociology at the #entro .scolar 3niversity in ,7FA, and Dr. "eici$ Cata)usa J invited to serve as a professional lecturer in sociology at the 3niversity of the -hilippines in ,7F@. P(i&i))ie S$ci$&$#ica& S$ciet' was organized by a group of )ilipino educators and visiting professors in the different regions. !ts objectives are: $o increase *nowledge about social behavior $o gather data on social problems for their possible solutions $o train teachers and researchers in the field of sociology, and $o develop cooperation and unity among social scientists in the -hilippines #onsiderable efforts have been made to define and to determine the fields of sociology. $here are considerable specializations in subject matter and in approach. 6ociological principles are being employed in the analysis of an increasing number of social situations. $he study of various problems led to discovering, refining, and perfecting new methods of sociological investigations. !n ,7A<s and ,7><s researches were underta*en along different aspects of social and cultural life. 5. Pers)ectives i U!ersta!i# t(e S$ciet' 0. C$%&ict Pers)ective $he conflict perspective, which originated primarily out of Iarl DarxEs writings on class struggles, presents society in a different light than do the functionalist and symbolic interactionist perspectives. (hile these latter perspectives focus on the positive aspects of society that contribute to its stability, the conflict perspective focuses on the negative, conflicted, and ever9 changing nature of society. 3nli*e functionalists who defend the status Guo, avoid social change, and believe people cooperate to effect social order, conflict theorists challenge the status Guo, 7 encourage social change (even when this means social revolution), and believe rich and powerful people force social order on the poor and the wea*. #onflict theorists, for example, may interpret an &elite' board of regents raising tuition to pay for esoteric new programs that raise the prestige of a local college as self9serving rather than as beneficial for students. American sociologists expanded DarxEs idea that the *ey conflict in society was strictly economic. $oday, conflict theorists find social conflict between any groups in which the potential for ineGuality exists: racial, gender, religious, political, economic, and so on. #onflict theorists note that uneGual groups usually have conflicting values and agendas, causing them to compete against one another. $his constant competition between groups forms the basis for the ever9 changing nature of society. #ritics of the conflict perspective point to its overly negative view of society. $he theory ultimately attributes humanitarian efforts, altruism, democracy, civil rights, and other positive aspects of society to capitalistic designs to control the masses, not to inherent interests in preserving society and social order. 1. S'*b$&ic2Iteracti$ist Pers)ective $he symbolic interactionist perspective, also *nown as symbolic interactionism, directs sociologists to consider the symbols and details of everyday life, what these symbols mean, and how people interact with each other. Although symbolic interactionism traces its origins to Dax (eberEs assertion that individuals act according to their interpretation of the meaning of their world, the American philosopher ;eorge H. Dead (,@A4J,74,) introduced this perspective to American sociology in the ,7B<s. According to the symbolic interactionist perspective, people attach meanings to symbols, and then they act according to their subjective interpretation of these symbols. Cerbal conversations, in which spo*en words serve as the predominant symbols, ma*e this subjective interpretation especially evident. $he words have a certain meaning for the &sender,' and, during effective communication, they hopefully have the same meaning for the &receiver.' !n other terms, words are not static &things' they reGuire intention and interpretation. #onversation is an interaction of symbols between individuals who constantly interpret the world around them. 1f ,< course, anything can serve as a symbol as long as it refers to something beyond itself. (ritten music serves as an example. $he blac* dots and lines become more than mere mar*s on the page they refer to notes organized in such a way as to ma*e musical sense. $hus, symbolic interactionists give serious thought to how people act, and then see* to determine what meanings individuals assign to their own actions and symbols, as well as to those of others. #ritics claim that symbolic interactionism neglects the macro level of social interpretationKthe &big picture.' !n other words, symbolic interactionists may miss the larger issues of society by focusing too closely on the &trees' (for example, the size of the diamond in the wedding ring) rather than the &forest' (for example, the Guality of the marriage). $he perspective also receives criticism for slighting the influence of social forces and institutions on individual interactions. 3. Fucti$a&ist Pers)ective According to the functionalist perspective, also called functionalism, each aspect of society is interdependent and contributes to societyEs functioning as a whole. $he government, or state, provides education for the children of the family, which in turn pays taxes on which the state depends to *eep itself running. $hat is, the family is dependent upon the school to help children grow up to have good jobs so that they can raise and support their own families. !n the process, the children become law9abiding, taxpaying citizens, who in turn support the state. !f all goes well, the parts of society produce order, stability, and productivity. !f all does not go well, the parts of society then must adapt to recapture a new order, stability, and productivity. )or example, during a financial recession with its high rates of unemployment and inflation, social programs are trimmed or cut. 6chools offer fewer programs. )amilies tighten their budgets. And a new social order, stability, and productivity occur. )unctionalists believe that society is held together by social consensus, or cohesion, in which members of the society agree upon, and wor* together to achieve, what is best for society as a whole. .mile 2ur*heim suggested that social consensus ta*es one of two forms: +ec(aica& s$&i!arit' is a form of social cohesion that arises when people in a society maintain similar values and beliefs and engages in similar types of wor*. Dechanical solidarity ,, most commonly occurs in traditional, simple societies such as those in which everyone herds cattle or farms. Amish society exemplifies mechanical solidarity. !n contrast, $r#aic s$&i!arit' is a form of social cohesion that arises when the people in a society are interdependent, but hold to varying values and beliefs and engage in varying types of wor*. 1rganic solidarity most commonly occurs in industrialized, complex societies such those in large American cities li*e 0ew 8or* in the B<<<s. ,B CHAPTER II SOCIET4 A. S$ci$2cu&tura& Ev$&uti$ 0. Tras%$r*ati$ a! C(a#e $% S$cieties !ncluded in socio9cultural transformation is the evolution and transformation of society as a whole. $his comes about through the influence of the totality of individuals and communities, groups and movements within that society as a whole. 6uch transformation is difficult to achieve, because the center of gravity of such societies is almost always at a very low, exoteric, non9gnostic, level. !n the (est it is based on religion and secular modernity. !n non9(estern countries it is almost always religious, generally fundamentalist, interwoven with fol* superstitions, and occaisonal esoteric insights from authentic indigenous mystics. 6ocial and cultural transformation will always lag behind individual transformation, because of the even greater inertia and lesser consciousness in the larger collectivity. 0evertheless there does seem to be something of a revolution of consciousness occurring, especially in the (estern world, which can for the sa*e of convenience be called -ostmaterialism $he following then represents a simplistic mapping of 6ocio9#ultural transformation, from negative to positive. De&usi$a&. .xtremist religion, paranoid or genocidal regimes, gospels of hate at war with or in league with the selfish and dualistic above who have totally lost all contact with larger reality. -uppets of adverse forces. E#$cetric5Se&%is(. !mperial #onsciousness (Iorten 9 62 eGuivalent is Dultiplistic9 achievist in part), 6ocial 2arwinism (based on the As above, the untransformed lower emotional body, necessary for survival in the wild environment, but only one half of the natural eGuation), unregulated capitalism, imperialism, jingoism, totalitarianism, authoritarianism (may be religious or secular), dominated by lac* of empathy. Day be ,4 selfish"narcissistic (if secular) or .go9shadow (if religious) psychological dynamics. 6ecular and conservative religious factions fight with /eformist ideologies for the heart and soul of the H.thnocentricH"2ualistic"5aseline mainstream. )or example .gocentric"6elfish corporations support polluting the .arth and exploiting $hird (orld people in order to maximise profits, deny climate change for short term gain, and so on. -oliticians and political parties will tend to support either .gocentric"6elfish, .thnocentric, or -luralistic"/eform"(orldcentric pressure groups. !n non9western countries, ta*es the form of authoritarian regimes, terrorist organisations, and so on. !n all cases, under the influence of adverse forces. 1f course, even the adverse and anti9divine ultimately further the 2ivine, so things should never be considered in too simplistically dualistic a manner. 6Et($cetric65Dua&istic5"ase&ie. 1rdinary society, the moral baseline that needs to be transformed. Day be $raditional"/eligious, /ational"Dodern and similar religio9 "ethno9 " anthropo9 and other 9centric society and culture, status Guo, most social interactions, 6ocialized #onsciousness, H;ood citizensH, #onservatism, limited consciousness rather than bad or exploitative. #urrent world situation attempts reform of selfish and delusional by selecting some as global pariahs, while maintaining business as usual with others often actively support them. !n natural ecologies and ecosystems ta*es the form of predation, parasitism, inter9species competition, intra9species competitiveness, old paradigm view of Hsurvival of the fittestH and Hnature red in tooth and clawH, a subset of the larger synergetic whole. Dix of selfish and altruistic: 6ome higher influences, but also under the sway of adverse forces, can go either way. P&ura&istic5W$r&!cetric57R8 Ev$&uti$ar'. !n natural ecologies and ecosystems ta*es the form of .mergent evolution, ecosystems, ecology. !n human societies the movement to pluralistic, postmodernist, multicultural, ecologically sustainable, society, which is resisted by traditionalism. $his stage represents a (orldcentric, HAGuarianH, emerging /ising #ulture"-ostmaterialism, which is finally rising to the level of synegetic nature. !n the human social realm this reform movement is resisted by traditionalism (and interestingly even by elements of integral movement: egotistic rivalry"jelousy?). /epresentatives of this stage of development fight with .gocentric"6elfish ideologies for ,F the heart and soul of the H.thnocentricH"2ualistic mainstream. !nspired by ideational plane pure ideas, but mixed with lower influences. /epresents consciuousness under the influence of higher impulses, with the adverse receding. H$&istic5S'ste*s5Ne9 Para!i#*5Ite#ra&. $his is the /ising #ulture"-ostmaterialism, 0ew Age as subculture, movement to pluralistic, postmodernist, multicultural, ecologically sustainable, societies, which is resisted by traditionalism. $he Alternative and 0ew Age and 0ew -aradigm society, including #ommercial and pop 0ew Age (wherein some cases the influences are mixed with baser selfish9imperialistic consciousness), and social and spiritual ideology and #ultural #reatives. 3nderstanding ;aia, nature as synegetic biological and spiritual interactions, Guantum mysticism and other ideas. $here is the ideal of establishing new global #ivilization and !ntegral world government, not yet achieved. !nspiration is from the ideational and higher emotional plane, pure ideas and empathy. +es$teric5)re2#$sis $he !deal of 0ew global #ivilization is not yet realised. !nspired by spiritual hierarchies, subtle physical in interaction with gross physical. Dixed energy, some pure ideas, some subtle"astral"spiritual experiences, some lower influences, surface astral"mental. Es$teric5:$stic. !t may be that a few societies e.g. .gypt, !ndia, $ibet, etc attained this in the past (collective esoteric worldview), but this was alwaus mixed up with religious literalism. $here is also the 0ew Age"mythic"messianic H;olden AgeH, as well as traditionalist ideas of a past ;olden Age, subtle physical spiritual hierarchies behind events and behind the the natural world spiritual and esoteric traditions and teachings, celestial hierarchies, adepts, realisers, active in the world, but not yet actualised collectively or globally. !nspiration here from subtle physical"astral"spiritual realms (include positive, mixed, and sometimes negative). Partia& a! C$*)&ete Rea&isati$ a! ab$ve. 6o far individual only, reGuires 2ivinisation to be collectively attained. ,= B. S$ci$2Cu&tura& C(a#e A change is a means, a process or an end. !t can be an ideology or a doctrine. !t may be an adoption of new objects and materials to attain certain goals. a. C(aracteristics $% S$cia& C(a#e Pervasive. #hange cannot be avoided and is happening in every culture, society and even personality. $he process by which a person or group of persons wor* together to prevent, resist or accept change due its possible conseGuences is reffered to as a social movement. C$tiu$us tras%$r*ati$. !t is continuous since man is continuously interacting with people and has to survive in the community where he lives. +a' be c$structive $r !estructive. Any change has an effect and impact on the concerned society. !t is constructive if it has positive results and destructive if in the course of time, social problems have accelerated and positive values have vanished slowly. b. S$urces $% S$cia& C(a#e P('sica& evir$*et. -hysical environment includes the climate and the natural and physical resources of the land. Any change among these will result in the change of people+s life pattern for people will find ways to cope with such change in order to survive. 2rastic changes in physical environment will ma*e people change their lifestyles and adopt mechanisms in their social organization. ,A P$)u&ati$. Any change in a country+s population size is most li*ely to have an effect in the lives of its people. A country with zero population growth rate or decline in number is in danger of being extinct while a country with excessively large population may not be able to provide for all the people+s needs. Tec($&$#'. $echnology is considered as a major source of change today. !t is observed that in a country, as the pace of technological development becomes rapid,so does the pattern of behavior of its people. Cu&tura& i$vati$. !ntroduction of cultural innovation among groups possessing similar cultures is faster than among the groups with varied cultures. C$%&ict a! c(a#e. #onflict which arises from the struggle between capitalists and wor*ers, or between the exploiting and the exploited class, changes society. I!e$&$#'. !deology of charismatic personalities in religion and in politics led to the formation of social movements. I!ivi!ua& acti$. Actions of individuals (political and religious leaders) may also influence the course of social change. C$&&ective be(avi$r. #ollective behavior is a relatively spontaneous action which occurs when people try to wor* out common responses to situation. $he behavior includes rumors, riots, demonstrations and rallies. $hese represent an attempt by the people to change aspects f their social government. !n some cases, the effects may be lasting, bringing about major social vLchanges. c. Causes $% S$cia& C(a#e +a;s P('sica&< Ps'c($&$#ica& a! S$ci$&$#ica& Nee!s. Aside from man+s basic needs such as food, water and air, he also has other needs to satisfy in order to cope with the changing environment and the demands of society in which the changing environment and the demands of society in which he is part of. !n order to satisfy ,> these needs, man used his mind and ability, resulting to inventions, discoveries and innovations that brought anout social change. :r$u) C$%&ict a! S$cia& Ie=ua&it'. $he long time social conflict oof the peasant and the bourgeoisie and the capitalist and the laborers resulted in class struggle and imposed a forced change in every society. T($u#(ts a! I!eas. Dan is a thin*er. He has the capacity to thin* and influence others J whether by spea*ing up or writing J resulting to social change. !. T(e$ries $% S$cia& C(a#e Ev$&uti$ar' t(e$r' views society as moving in a definite direction, characterized by constant development or change. Ui&iear ev$&uti$ar' t(e$r' views society as progressing from a simple to a complex form of organization. +u&ti&iear ev$&uti$ar' t(e$r', in contrast, views the occurrence of change in several lines that do not lead to a single direction. C$%&ict t(e$r'< exponented by Iarl Darx, the conflict theory views society+s structure and elements as constantly changing resulting in conflict. #onflict is accepted as a normal and desirable aspect of social change and cannot be avoided. >Rise a! %a&&? or c'c&ica& t(e$r' sees society, culture and civilization moving in cycles. 6ome civilizations which experienced progress and glory before slowly regress while socities which have been wea* before intechnology and in political power have now accelerated. Structura& %ucti$a&is* t(e$r' or %ucti$a&ist t(e$r' believed in a balanced system of institution. $his theory, forerunnered by $alcott -arsons, emphasized that society is ,@ composed of different parts, each of which has complementary functions. !dentified here are the four processes of social change: Di%%eretiati$ refers to the increasing complexity of social organization. A!a)tive u)#ra!i# happens when social institutions become more specialized in their purposes. Ic&usi$ refers to the assimilation of groups into society which were previously excluded due to gender, social class and other factors. -a&ue #eera&i/ati$ means the development of new values lead to legitimizing and tolerating activities. ". S$cia& :r$u)s a! Or#ai/ati$s 0. Nature $% #r$u)s a! its c&assi%icati$s !n the social sciences a s$cia& #r$u) can be defined as two or more humans who interact with one another, share similar characteristics and collectively have a sense of unity. 5y this definition, a society can be viewed as a large group, though most social groups are considerably smaller. Dan is by nature a social being. He does not live in isolation but has to relate with other people. His relation with others results in the formation of a group that will help him in the development of his personality. $he impact of influence will bear either a positive or a negative effect on him depending on the *ind of people he is interacting with and how these people will react to him and to his environment. ,7 A true social group exhibits some degree of social cohesion and is more than a simple collection or aggregate of individuals, such as people waiting at a bus stop, or people waiting in a line. #haracteristics shared by members of a group may include interests, values, representations, ethnic or social bac*ground, and *inship ties. -aul Hare regards the defining characteristic of a group as social interaction. $he members of the groups contact each other which Ac*eema Mohnson calls a Hregular interaction.H $his group also should have, a common identity, rules, structure, etc. Dan+s need to associate with other people, to belong as a social being and depend on other people as others depend on him in some aspects gradually turns him into a member of a group which exerts influence in shaping his personality. a. C$ce)t $% S$ciet' a! its C(aracteristics 6ociety is a group of different personalities from identified and classified groups with distinct characteristics. Lar#est a*$# t(e #r$u)s because it has various types. A number of small groupings may comprise a particular society. 6ociety (as a !istict cu&ture s(are! b' *$st $r a&*$st a&& $% its *e*bers. A pattern of behavior, values and language exist among the members. +e*bers(i) c$*es %r$* a re)r$!uctive s$urce. !ndividuals almost automatically become members of society when they are born while the old ones who passed away are replaced by young individuals who are socialized according to the adopted culture. S$ciet' &asts &$#er t(a its &i%eti*e i!ivi!ua& #r$u) *e*bers. !f a member with a lifetime membership passes away, the society remains as a human race and still exists on this earth. b. Nature a! C$ce)ts $% :r$u)s B< 6ocial groups may have varied forms and may be classified into several categories depending on one+s perception. 6ome sociologists have identified groups depending on their shown behavior and practices in the society, others have perceived social gropings into two level concepts: *acr$ and *icr$2s$cia& systems. $hese are very important for sociology because they are the *eys to the whats, whys, and hows of behavior. D'a!< the simplest social relationship, is a pair of people with attached roles. !t is characterized by a high exchange of information and intimacy because it allows the greatest opportunity for total involvement between two persons. Tria! is composed of three or more people interacting as a group. Sub#r$u) is simply a group that is a part of a larger group. ;roups may be contrasted to s$cia& cate#$ries which is a set of people with one or more social statuses in common. 5eing of similar status, members of social categories often become oriented with similar cultural ideas, but do not usually identify themselves as units nor interact with one another in a regular patterned way as members of a group do. 1. S$cia& :r$u)s A group is a unit of interacting personalities with an interdependence of roles and statuses existing between the members. !ti is a collective effort of behavior in a particular organization in society. Dembers usually share same beliefs, behavior, attitudes and actions based on adopted norms and standards. A group also refers to one or more people who identify and interact with one another. B, 8 13 D . 0A D. 4 0A D. B 0A D. , 6ome sociologists refer to s$cia& #r$u) as any system of social relationship in which members have a culture that defines the roles and statuses from whom members are differentiated from nonmembers. 6ocial groups vary in form each member has his own role expected of him to perform in the social grouping to which he belongs. ;roups or social groups are organizations of people where individual members are aware that they belong to it. ;roup is visible and real because they exist in time and space. !t vary in size, Guality of group interaction, purpose, structure or combinations. )urthermore, groups are basic units of sociological analysis. (e perform most of our roles with time. /oles are important sources of both social control and conflict. $he cultural and structural characteristics of many social groups affect not only the lives of individuals, but the fate of the entire society as well. a. C(aracteristics $% :r$u)s A #r$u) c$sists $% )e$)&e 9($ iteract a! %$r* s$cia& )atters. A group is at least one person larger than a dyad. !t has three or more people. ;roups are different from dyads in that they depend less on the individual actor for continuity. Icrease i si/e e=ua&s &$ss $% %ree!$*. As the group grows in numbers, the individual freedom of any particular member is de9emphasized. )urthermore, as the group grows in size, more emphasis is put on the well9being of the group. Iteracti$ rea%%ir*s s$cia& )atters. ;roups depend on interaction to affirm and reaffirm social patterns. $he strength of patterns in the group depends on the history of the interaction. 3sually, the longer the group exists, the stronger the bonds become. :r$u)s c$tribute t$ &ar#er $r#ai/ati$. 6ocial organization at the Hformal levelH is sufficiently large that continuous interaction among all actors is impossible. .ven in large organizations interaction between individuals still occurs in small groups. $he interaction of small groups within the frame wor* of larger organizations reaffirms the social patterns of the larger social organizations. BB :r$u)s !e%ie rea&it' %$r t(e i!ivi!ua&. $he groupEs definition of reality is a pattern that the individual assumes. $he individual forms expectations about the world through group involvement. 1ne learns within the group what the important issues are and the guide lines (the rules) that the group expects you to live by. :r$u) *e*bers iteract 9it( $e a$t(er $ver a )eri$! $% ti*e. $he process of interaction may be done through words, actions, symbols or through music where one+s action is influenced. !f well9organized, a group will exist longer for a period of time especially if the channel of communication is always open. Eac( *e*ber i!eti%ies 9it( t(e #r$u) a! is rec$#i/e! as )art $% t(e #r$u) b' $t(er *e*bers. .ach member are ac*nowledged and the belief that their group is distinct from other groups. A well9organized and managed group can motivate each member to love the group, always identify with it and display loyalty too the group. .ach member is expected to accept responsibilities and duties abide by certain norms. Dembers may enjoy some benefits and privelges the group would extend. Dembers follow specialization in carrying out performances of their respective roles. !n a cooperative organization, a group is assigned a particular role to perform. b. I*)$rtace $% :r$u)s 6ome basic needs cannot be provided by an individual alone. .veryone needs the help of group members to procure these needs. :r$u) is a tras*itter $% cu&ture. $he process of socialization carries a strng influence in the dissemination of information within a group. .ach member of the group is considered as an agent of culture. :r$u) is a *eas $% s$cia& c$tr$&. $he process which induces a person to comply with the collective standards of action and belief is called social control. !t includes the B4 imposition by the leaders of the group in order for the members to conform to acceptable standards of the group to be considered as a member. $hus, a group helps shape one+s personality it imposes restrictions and disciplines on its members to some extent which the members must conform to get the group+s approval and acceptance. :r$u) s$cia&i/es t(e i!ivi!ua&. $he full development of a person starts from where he belongs J the group. $his can be shown clearly in the family, being the basic social unit. :r$u) is t(e %u!a*eta& s$urce $% i!eas. $he daily interactions of the group+s members influence their thin*ing, feelings and even their behavior and actions. !t has been noted that a member of a group has his own personal biases and prejudices because he is a uniGue individual. However, his actions can be modified or adjusted either favorably or unfavorably, depending on how he reacts to his social and physical environment, based on the influence of his groupmates. :r$u) trais t(e i!ivi!ua& i c$**uicati$s. $hrough communication of the members, the group is a source of information. $he more active members of a group share available information with their other passive members. $hus, the group is considered as the &communication networ*.' c. C&assi%icati$ $% :r$u)s c.0 Acc$r!i# t$ S$cia& "$u!aries a! A!(erece t$ a S)ecia& Set $% N$r*s Cate#$rica& #r$u) refers is where members tend to share certain characteristics and interests and are aware of their similarities with other members in their own social category. $he idea of categorical groupings has a practical application to life situations wherein the focus is on the support of the members. A##re#ate #r$u) is where members stay in one place, but do not necessarily interact with each other. Dembers of this group are concerned only with their own feelings and attitudes. BF C$&&ective #r$u) refers to a crowed whose members are not governed with laws or norms, but share the same beliefs that motivate them to action. Ass$ciati$a& #r$u) is composed of a group of people who organize themselves to pursue a common interest with a formal organizational structure. !n an associational group, there is a set of officers elected by its members which is responsible for running the association. c.1 Acc$r!i# t$ Iteracti$ a! Re&ati$s(i) Pri*ar' #r$u) refers to a small, informal group of people who interact in a more personal, intimate manner and who always have direct and face9toface communication with each other. !t is characterized as the nursery of human nature because it is the group where the child is socialized, acGuires and experiences love, affection, sympathy, *indness, tolerance, fairness, loyalty and justice. $he individual learns the meaning of personal worth and dignity of a person. Sec$!ar' #r$u) involves indirect, impersonal interaction where members are forced to interact because of business transactions and the li*es. Dembers can function effectively because of the absence of the touch of familiarity where subjectivity comes in. c.3 Acc$r!i# t$ *e*bers(i) I2#r$u) refers to a group of people with strong sense of belongingness. !t is a group to which we do belong and a group that an individual identifies in positive direction. !ts members have a strong &we feeling,' share common orientation, come from the same bac*ground, roots and origin and adhere to the ideology. An in9group is further characterized by a feeling of companionship and a great sense of loyalty. Out2#r$u) is exactly the opposite of in9group. !t is a group to which we do not belong and a group that an individual identifies in negative direction. $his group is made up of people whose feelings are antagonistic to the group itself. $here is physical membership but in mind and heart, the members disli*e the group because of the concept that another B= group is superior to their group. !t is a stereotype where members of the group have specialized tra!e*ar@s. Re%erece #r$u) is a group where people identify themselves physically and psychologically to which other people refer in evaluating their behavior and actions. $he group becomes the individual+s %ra*e $% re%erece for his motivations, aspirations, experiences, attitudes and social affiliations. A reference group often tends to give an impression to a articular person as to his social, economic and even political status in the community. 6ometimes, individuals try to identify themselves with groups whose standing is well9*nown regionally, nationally or even internationally to demand high respect and special treatment from others. Peer #r$u) is a group with members of approximately the same age, social status, and interests. !t is a small *ind of grouping whose members have the same level, interests and economic standing in the community. #onsciously and unconsciously, the members group themselves because they share the same interests and talents. $here is also a sense of belongingness, sympathy and loyalty among themselves. ;enerally, people are relatively eGual in terms of power when they interact with peers. -$&utar' ass$ciati$ is an organization where membership is free and voluntary. $hough voluntary in nature, members follow some seta of rules or policies. Coluntary associations are found usually in some relatively simple societies composed of members with varied and competing interests. +i&itar' ass$ciati$s are noncommercial societies whose goals are to unite members through their common experiences. Demberships in these associations are voluntary and based on a member+s achieved criterion. Secret s$cieties are principally characterized by limited membership and by secret rituals (taboos) generally believed to increase the supernatural powers of its members. Re#i$a& ass$ciati$s are clubs that bring together migrants from common geographical bac*grounds. !t actually gives BA rise to out9groups, particularly when in a foreign milieu. $he tendency towards &crab mentality' is heightened in certain cases. c.A Acc$r!i# t$ T(eir Nature< F$r*< Objectives a! Iteracti$s I%$r*a& #r$u) is the most common type of grouping based on nature, form, objectives and interaction. !t occurs when two or more people interact with each other on issues affecting their welfare. An informal group could be a product of an impulsive act but later on grows into a partnership endeavor with the constant sharing of emotions and sentiments of members. $he group ensures cooperation from each member because of their sense of belongingness and self9confidence. F$r*a& #r$u) is an organization where the specific organizational structure is constructed to achieve specific goals and objectives. $his group has to fulfill a variety of specialized social and personal needs that influence one+s personality. /egardless of its nature, a formal organization has an established philosophy, mission, vision and goals as its guiding premises in the discharge of its functions. !t is in this concern that formal organizations meet their fundamental needs and continue their collaborative efforts to attain these aspirations in a highly complex, industrial and business society.formal organization plays an important role in social interaction. !t enables people to wor* harmoniously to achieve a common goal. $here is a focus among its members because members wor* not as individuals but as a team with a common goal following one direction. !t defines the specific functions of each personnel in the organization. $here are clear9cut policies that guide the members so members are aware of their statuses and roles. 6pecialization of tas*s is observed which results in better productivity in the organization. !t creates a level of authority as to the channeling of communication. $he flow of communication should be open to all channels so that members can readily present their ideas or feedbac* to the right person in authority. B> c.B :e*eisc((a%t c$**uities a! :esse&sc(a%t S$cieties :e*eisc((a%t is a community characterized by informal associations due to close geography or line of ancestry wherein relationships are personal or traditional. )ilipino ;emeinschhaft community may be seen in rural barrio characterized by a monotonous life where members exhibit sympathy and sentimentalism. #ommunity+s activities and interests revolve around family groups and neighbors. Calues, customs, traditions, languages and moral beliefs account for close relationship. :esse&sc(a%t s$cieties, the contrast of ;emeinschhaft community, are distinguished as having formal businessli*e, impersonal, independent, specialized, limited, realistic and fragmented relationships. ;esselschaft societies, described as a &society in contrast,' are dynamic and industrialized. c.C Ot(er t')es $% #r$u)s ic&u!e t(e %$&&$9i#: C&i=ue 2 A group of people that have many of the same interests N commonly found in a High 6chool"#ollege setting most of the time they have a name N rules for themselves. C&ub 2 A club is a group, which usually reGuires one to apply to become a member. 6uch clubs may be dedicated to particular activities: sporting clubs, for example. H$use($&! 2 All individuals who live in the same home. Anglophone culture may include various models of household, including the family, blended families, share housing, and group homes. C$**uit' 2 A community is a group of people with a commonality or sometimes a complex net of overlapping commonalities, oftenJbut not alwaysJin proximity with one another with some degree of continuity over time. Frac(ise 2 An organization which runs several instances of a business in many locations. :a# 2 A gang is usually an urban group that gathers in a particular area. !t is a group of people that often hang around each other. $hey can be li*e some clubs, but much less formal. $hey are usually *nown in many countries to cause social unrest and also have B@ negative influence on the members and may be a target for the law enforcers in case of any social vices +$b 2A mob is usually a group of people that has ta*en the law into their own hands. Dobs are usually groups which gather temporarily for a particular reason. P$sse 2 A posse was originally found in .nglish common law. !t is generally obsolete, and survives only in America, where it is the law enforcement eGuivalent of summoning the militia for military purposes. However, it can also refer to a street group. S=ua! 2 $his is usually a small group, of around 4 to ,= people, who wor* as a team to accomplish their goals. Tea* 2 6imilar to a sGuad, though a team may contain many more members. A team wor*s in a similar way to a sGuad. ;roups can also be categorized according to the number of people present within the group. $his ma*es sense if the size of the group has conseGuences for the way group members relate with each other. !n a small group, for example, Heach member receives some impression ... of each other member distinct enough so that he or she ... can give some reaction to each of the others as an individual person.H $his personal interaction is not possible in larger groups. d. T(e I*)$rtace $% :r$u) Status a! R$&e i S$cia& Iteracti$ Status< considered as one of the building bloc*s of social structure, is a position that an individual occupies in a particular group or society. 6ocial identities help one define his relationship in an organization. .ach has a specific function to perform and has corresponding targets to achieve. Status set is the varied atatuses a person holds. !t incorporates all the occupied statuses of an individual. (ith these status sets, one has varied roles to perform. !.0 C&assi%icati$ $% Status B7 Ascribe! status refers to a social position a person receives at birth or assumes involuntarily later in life. !t is hereditary and without regard to a person+s ability or performance. .ach of us possesses an ascribed status. Ac(ieve! status refers to a position a person ssumes voluntarily and reflects personal ability and efforts. +aster status is the most important status occupied by an individual which affects almost every aspect of his day9to9day existence. R$&e, another component of social interaction refers to the behavior expected of someone who holds a particular status. -eople hold a status to perform a role. Actual performance varies according to an individual+s uniGue personality. !.1 Di!s $% R$&es R$&e c$%&icts are difficulties that occur when incompatible expectations arise from two or more social positions held by the same individual. !t occurs when one+s responsibility in one of his social positions interfers with the other. R$&e strai refers to tensions among roles connected to a single status. /ole strain presents a serious problem in performing roles inherent even to one+s status. R$&e eEit is a process where the person starts to disengage from his particular role or social role. $his is exemplified by the so9called &exes.' C. S$cia&i/ati$ 6ocialization is a complex lifetime social experience by which individuals develop their human potentials and learn culture. !ndividuals need social experiences to learn their culture and survive. 6ocialization shapes individual+s self9image and is the foundation of personality. 6ociety has basic agents to socialize and mold one+s personality from womb to tomb. As such, individuals are always in contact with one another, thus establishing person9to9person relations or &social relations.' 4< 0. U!ersta!i# S$cia&i/ati$ As individuals assume new social and occupational positions, it is necessary to discard their previous behavior patterns and accept the new behavior patterns of his"her new status. $his process is *nown as socialization. a. C$ce)t $% S$cia& Iteracti$ According to sociologists, group interaction is the process of defining and responding to various actions and relations of individuals in social situations. !t provides aframewor* for a dynamic social relationship. 6ocial interaction is the way persons or groups act or communicate with one another. !t ta*es place in social, political and economic institutions and social structures which give impetus to social relationship. !t is the process of defining and responding to various actions and reactions of individuals in social situations. b. C&assi%icati$ $% S$cia& Iteracti$ Structura& iteracti$ is where a communication networ* is established based on structure. !nteraction is more formal based on the role function of each member. Cu&tura& iteracti$ emphasizes cultural aspects of social relationships. Re&i#i$us iteracti$ refers to innovation and changes which can be affected through interaction among religious organizations. :e$#ra)(ica& iteracti$ is based on geographical domains and its varying effects on social interaction. c. S$cia& Pr$cesses 6ocial process refers to any mutual interaction experienced by an individual or a group on each other in an attempt to solve problems and achieve desired goals.this process may be in varied froms depending on the degree of its complexity. 6ocial process consists of repetitive forms of behavior commonly found in social life and refers to a consistent pattern of social interaction which can be identified in the society. c.0 C&assi%icati$ $% S$cia& Pr$cesses C$juctive s$cia& )r$cess is where members maintain and practice consensus, cooperation and unification. C$$)erati$ is sharing the responsibility or act of wor*ing together in order to achieve a common goal or vision. !t is a social process where people wor* together to achieve a 4, group+s common objectives and share some benefits derived from it. 5asic cooperation is experienced in the family and other social group where members share their talents, time, resources and expertise along their fields of specialization. 0. T')es $% C$$)erati$ I%$r*a& is a spontaneous give9and9ta*e relationship. !t is commonly shown in primary groups or in ;emeinschaft societies. F$r*a& sets formal goals and objectives in social interaction. !t is contractual in nature with reciprocal rights and obligartions of members. S'*bi$tic cooperation is where one or two members of society live together harmoniously and support one another for mutual interest. 1. Fucti$ $% C$$)erati$ !t crerates s$cia& c$(esi$ and ite#rati$ among the members of the group !t contributes to s$cia& stabi&it' and $r!er. !t fosters c$sesus and c$*)r$*ise in various social, economic and political issues. Acc$**$!ati$, defined by sociologists as the adjustment of hostile individuals or groups, is an adjustment to conflict, past, present and incipient. %i*ewise, another authority described it as either permanent or temporary termination of conflict which permits the rival parties too function together without open hostility. Accommodation is a process of establishing temporary agreements, compromises or negotiations among group members to be able to wor* for a particular period of time without friction. Accommodation refers to the actual act of wor*ing together among individuals or groups in spite of differences or latent hostility. 2ifferent forms of accommodation are )&ae! and formally negotiated or u)&ae!, the product of group interaction or brainstorming. U)&ae! !is)&ace*et occurs when the source of frustration is vague and intangible or when the person responsible for the frustration is so powerful than an attac* would be dangerous, aggression may be displaced and the aggressive reactions may be directed to an innocent person or object rather than toward the actual cause of frustration. Hence, it is a process of ending a conflict by using a scapegoat wherein the failure of one person or group for poor performanceor noncompliance to certain norms and standards. 4B A c$%&ict occurs between persons or groups with uneGual status and ends by the acceptance of defeat by the wea*er group over the powerful group. Su)er$r!iati$2sub$r!iati$ wor*s only when it is impossible for one group to continue the aggression against the more powerful group. $here is a realization of the wea*er group that their effort of struggle to prevail is futile. C$*)r$*ise is where extreme demands are given up to achieve limited goals and could be described as a &loss9loss' or &win9win' situation. Re&ease %r$* ($sti&it' is where most individuals who are in trouble experience problems but still find ways to release their worries through relaxation. T$&erati$ occurs when both parties realize that a settlement of conflict is impossible. !f an agreement is not necessary to solve the problem, then the group will just let go or accept each other+s rights to different actions to the problem+s resolution. Assi*i&ati$ refers to the process of interpretation and fusion in which persons and groups acGuire the memories, sentiments and attitudes of other persons and by sharing their experiences and history, which are incorporated with them in a cultural life. As proces it reduces social conflict because the person assimilated in a group tends to combine or integrate their own culture with the group+s culture. 1n the negative note, hoever, there were some cases that a member loses his own social identity as a result of adapting to changes to conform to the group standards and norms in order to be accepted and gain the group+s approval. Assimilation process is easier when there is direct contact, intimate and personal interaction. A*a&#a*ati$ is a biological interbreeding of two peoples of distinct physical appearance until they became one stoc*. Accu&turati$ is a processand effect of significant change through mutual barrowings and adoptions by people of different cultures in contact with some continuity. !t is also a process of acGuiring the culture of another ethnic group. !n other words, one may adopt the culture and practices of the society where he wor*s but still retain his own social identity or nationality. c.1 Disjuctive S$cia& Pr$cesses 44 C$%&ict occurs when two goals of eGual importance are scarce. $here is a need to prioritize social needs. #onflict occurs when a particular goal is opposing one+s own principle in attaining the desired or targeted purpose. !t is a struggle in which the claims of the conflicting parties are not only to give the desired values but also to neutralize, injure or eliminate rivals (#oser, ,7A@). !n conflict, there is pgysicl or psychological sacrifices on the part of the persons involved. War is a destructive and violent way to settle conflicts and disputes which are resorted to by men when they have tensions and economic, demographic, religious, cultural and technological differences. Feu! is rampant among clans, fraternities, and politics it is triggered by feelings of bitterness between parties or groups because of some injustice done ot their members. Liti#ati$ $r Le#a& "att&e occurs when conflict between individuals or groups can no longer be resolved amicably so it is ta*en to the courts where a judge presides on the merits of the case. C$%&icts $% I*)ers$a&I!ea&s is carried on by individuals or groups for a principle or an ideal, not for personal benefit but for the group or society+s wellbeing. Arbitrati$, a less formal process, is resorted to when decision of courts tends to be slow and litigation is expensive for both conflicting parties. $he two conflicting parties agree to accept the decision of a third party. C$*)r$*ise occurs when the conflicting parties agree to settle for less than their demand objectives. !t is difficult because both parties have to surrender their principles to reach an agreement. C$*)etiti$ may have merit and demerit in human behavior. !t is a from of opposition, struggle or competition between two or more parties who vie for superiority or to secure any predefined endeavor. Pers$a& c$*)etiti$ involves direct and face9to9face contact where individuals or groups may employ varied strategies to excel in their fields of specialization to be superior to others. !nnovations and creative wor*s may be employed by individuals or groups just to outdo their opponents in securing promotions in positions. 4F I*)ers$a& c$*)etiti$ refers to individuals or groups or business entities struggling, not directly aware of each other+s presence. !t may be person9to9person or by groups, referred to as teams. Di%%eretiati$ is a social process of iliminating competition. !t is thecreation of interest in individuals or groups needing or wanting different things or services rather than the same thing. 2ifferentiation of status, lifestyle and prestige leads to the creation of subcultures as as well as in the development of social stratifications. c.3 Itera&ati$s(i)s $% S$cia& Pr$cesses #onjunctive and disjunction social processes are interrelated. $hey are intertwined and occur simultaneously. #ompetition occurs when resources are scarce, leading to variation or differentiation. 6pecialization leads to delineation of functions, but it can also lead to cooperation and integration of groups. #ooperation exists side by side with competition. #onflict, on the other hand, as a condition and as a process. As a process, accommodation refers to the conscious efforts of man to develop wor*ing arrangements arrangements among themselves in order to suspend conflict. %i*ewise, as a condition, accommodation refers to the fact of eGuilibrium between individuals and groups and the rules of the game which have to be followed. c.A S$cia&i/ati$ a! Pers$a&it' Pers$a&it' is the sum total of a person+s character traits. !t is the person+s fairly consistent pattern of acting, thin*ing and feeling (Daciones, B<<B). -ersonality may also be the product of hereditary and emvironment (6antos, ,77=). .tymologically, personality, originated from the %atin word persona which means a theatrical mas* worn by /oman actors in ;ree* drams to -roject a role or false appearance. -sychologists, however, see personality as something more than the roles people play. !t is a pattern of relatively permanent traits, dispositions or characteristics that give some measure of consistency to a person+s behavior and these may be uniGue, common to some group or sharedby people. 4= c.B Fact$rs $% Pers$a&it' Deve&$)*et -ersonality development is the development of all aspects of personality, the total development of personality. $his leads to the full development of a person+s potentials (5iological"physical, sociological, geographical, cultural, mental, intellectual, emotional and moral). 0.0 S$cia&i/ati$ a! Se&% :e$r#e Herbert +ea!: T(e S$cia& Se&% ;eorge Herbert Dead developed the Theory of Behaviorism to explain how social experience creates individual personality which recognized the evir$*et as a powerful influencing factor in shaping a person+s personality dwelling on i9ar! be(avi$r. $heories: Se&%< that part of an individual+s personality composed of self9awareness and self9image and is not part of the body and does not exist at birth, is his central concept. S$cia& eE)eriece is the exchange of symbols. 1nly human beings communicate by words or signals to create meaning, find meanings in action and respond according to their purpose or intention, animals do not. -eople e*)(ati/e using symbols. $his way, they can anticipate how others will react to a given situation. 6ocial interaction then is ta*ing the r$&e $% t(e $t(er which involves seing the self as others see it. T9$ Parts $% Se&% I F the active side +e F the object Deve&$)*et $% t(e Se&% 4A Si#i%icat Ot(ers. !nfant ta*e the role of other initiation without understanding the underlying intentions, so they have no self. As they learn to use language and other symbls, the self emerges through play. -laying the role of adults helps young children imagine the world from the adult+s points of view. :eera&i/e! Ot(ers. ;radually, children move from initiation, simple plays to games, to complex games involving others in team sports. $his refers to widespread cultural norms and values we use as references in evaluating ourselves. C(ar&es H$rt$ C$$&e': T(e L$$@i#2:&ass Se&% $heories: $he &$$@i#2#&ass se&% refers to the self9imagae based on how people thin* others see them. $his means that people can see themselves according to how others see them. !t is a development of the self through the use of language and provides that an individual acGuires a social self when he has already developed the Ability to ta*e hold of the attitudes and roles of others and see how others see him. T(ree )(ases $% !eve&$)i# a se&&%2c$ce)t $r se&%2i!etit': (,) our imagination of how we present ourselves to others, (B) our imagination of how we are evaluated by others, and (4) our own feeling about ourselves as we are seen by others. 0.1 T(e$ries $% S$cia&i/ati$ a! Pers$a&it' ,.Ba Ps'c($aa&'tic T(e$ries -sychoanalytic theories focus on the mental amnd emotional processes that shape the human personality. Si#*u! Freu!: A person builds or develops his"her personality by interacting with others in society. 6igmund )reud was the proponent of psychoanalytic theory and a foremost psychoanalyst who 4> formulated the first comprehensive theory on personality and left a deep impact on subseGuent psychologists. $heories: -ersonality is the sum total of a person+s character traits, a form of biological determination and that socialization was a process characterized by an internal struggle between the biological component and the social9cultural environment. E&e*ets $% Pers$a&it': t(e T(ree +aj$r S'ste*s I!< the psychological component the original system of personality and the matrix within which the ego and tAhe superego become differentiated. !t is a structure of the mind which represents the human being+s basic unconsciousness, drives and demanding immediate gratification. !t consists of everything psychological, including the instincts which are inherited. E#$ is the executive of personality and is the mediator between the needs of the organism and the objective world of reality. !t represents the person+s conscious effort to balance innate pleasure9see*ing drives with the demands of society. !ts psychological component has control over all the cognitive and intellectual processes and tries to control the gateways to action Su)ere#$ is the social component the internal representative of the traditional values and ideals of society as interpreted to the child by its parents. !t represents the person+s conscience the operation of culture within the individual which tells the person why he"she cannot have everything that he"she wants. !t is the moral arm of personality and consists of the conscience and ego ideal Five +aj$r Sta#es $% Deve&$)*et 2uring each of )reud+s five major stages of development, the id+s pleasure impulses focus on a particular area of the body and on the activities in that area. 4@ 0. 2uing $ra& sta#e (infants) infants derive pleasure from nursing, suc*ing and putting any in their mouths. 1. !n the aa& sta#e< children find pleasure both in withholding and expelling feces. $here is conflict with parents who impose early toilet training. 3. 2uring the )(a&&ic sta#e (49A years old) children of three to six years old derive their in fondling their genitals, observing sex differences and directing their awa*ening sexual impulses toward the opposite sex. At five to six years old, boy+s sexual impulses are directed toward their mother. $hey perceive their fathers as rivals to their mother+s affection. $his is termed Oe!i)us c$*)&eE by )reud derived from ;ree* Dythology where 1edipus *ills his father and marries his mother. 5oys fear castration from their fathers as retaliation against their sexual impulses. E&e@tra c$*)&eE< the female version of 1edipus complex, wherein the female child develops sexual feelings toward her father. A. Latec' )eri$! (>9,B) is characterized by children becoming less concerned with their bodies and developing s*ills for coping with their environment. !t is when 1edipus and .le*tra complex are resolved. B. :eita& )eri$! (adolescence and puberty)is the age of maturity, adult sexuality and functioning. A&%re! A!&er: Adler is *nown for his wor* on individual psychology. -eople begin life with both innate striving and physical deficiencies which combine to produce feelings of inferiority. $hese feelings stimulate style to set a goal of overcoming their inferiority. S$cia& iterest or a deep concern for the welfare of other people is the sole criterion by which human actions should be judged. $heories: 47 $he three major problems of life are ei#(b$r&' &$ve< 9$r@ and seEua&. $hese can only be solved through social interest. All behaviors are consistent with a person+s final goal. Human behavior is shaped by people+s subjective perception of situations. Here!it' and evir$*et provide the building materials of personality but people+s creative power is responsible for their lifestyle. EEcuses< a##ressi$ and 9it(!ra9a& are some of people+s various safeguarding tendencies as conscious or unconscious attempts to protect inflated feelings of superiority against public disgrace. "irt( $r!er, ear&' rec$&&ecti$s and !rea*s are used to foster courage, self9esteem and social interest. Dare H$re': Horney espoused the psychoanalytic social theory and insisted that cultural influences wre more important than biological influences in shaping an individual+s personality. $heories: AEiet' was triggered by the feelings of isolation and helplessness in a potentially hostile world form the lac* of warmth and affection and failing to meet their needs for safety and satisfaction during their younger years. $he t(ree eur$tic tre!s< the tendency to *$ve t$9ar!, a#aist or a9a' from people, were generated by the inability of people to use different tactics in their relationship with others. Healthy people solve their basic conflict by using all three neurotic trends while neurotics compulsively adopt only one of these trends. 5oth healthy and neurotic people experience itra)s'c(ic c$%&icts that have become part of their belief system and this has two major *inds. F< I!ea&i/e! se&%2i*a#e results in the neurotics+ attempts to build a godli*e picture of themselves. Se&%2(atre! is the tendency of neurotics to hate and despise their real slef. Any psychological differences between men and women are due to cultural and social expectations and not to biology. Horney+s psychotheraphy goal is to bring about growth toward actualization of the rea& se&%. Eric Fr$**: He called his approach on psychoanalysis the humanistic psychoanalysis. $heories: 6elf9awareness contributes to feelings of loneliness. $o escape these feelings, people strive to become united with others and with nature. 1nly the uniGue human needs of relatedness, transcendence and rootedness, sense of identity and frame of orientation can move people toward reunification. Sese $% re&ate!ess drives people to unite with another person through (,) )$sitive %ree!$* or the spontaneous activity of a whole, integrated personality and (B) bi$)(i&ia or submission, power of love. Trasce!ece is the need for people to rise above their passive existence and create or destroy life. R$$te!ess is the need for a consistent structure in people+s lives. Sese $% i!etit' gives a person a feeling of I or me. Fra*e $% $rietati$ is a consistent way of loo*ing at the world. F, "asic aEiet'< a sense of being alone in the world, was acGuired as a conseGuence of gaining economic and political freedom. $o relieve this, various mechanisms were used, particularly authoritarianism, destructiveness and conformity. $hough some people succeed in becoming one with the world, live productively and acGuire the syndrome of growth (i.e. including a passionate love for life and love of fellowmen), other people live unproductively and acGuire things by passively receiving and hoarding objects, exploiting others, and mar*eting or exchanging things including themselves. !n rare situations, people are motivated by the syndrome of decay. Necr$)(i&ia is the love of death. +a&i#at arcissis* is the infatuation with one+s own self. Icestu$us s'*bi$sis is the tendency to remain bound to a mothering person or her eGuivalent. )romm+s psychotherapy goal is too establish union with problematic+ people so that they can reunite with the rest of the world. Harr' Stac@ Su&&iva: 6ullivan+s interpersonal theory, believed that people develop their personality through their interpersonal relationships. $heories: EE)eriece ta*es place on three levels: (,) )r$t$taEic or primitive"pre9symbolic, (B) )arataEic or not accurately in communication with others, and (4) s'taEic or accurate communication. $he two aspects of experience are tesi$s (potential for action) and eer#' tras%$r*ati$s (actions or behaviors). $ensions are of two *inds: (,) ee!s which is conjunctive and facilitates interpersonal development, and (B) aEiet' which is disjunctive in that it interferes with the FB satisfaction of needs and is the primary obstacle to establishing healthy interpersonal relationships. D'a*is*s are typical traits or behavior patterns resulting from energy transformations that had become organized. T')ica& !'a*is*s include *a&ev$&ece (a feeling of living in enemy country), iti*ac' (a close interpersonal relationship with a peer or eGual status) and &ust (impersonal sexual desires). -ari$us !eve&$)*et sta#es: 0 st I%ac' (from birth to the development of syntacxic language) is a time when an infant+s primary interpersonal relationship is with the one him+her mothering. 1 ! C(i&!($$! sta#e (from syntaxic language to the need for playmates of eGual status) is where the relationship with the mother continues to be the most important interpersonal relationship, although children of this age often have an imaginary playmate. 3 r! .uvei&e sta#e (the phase where the child needs playmates of eGual status necessary for the development of intimacy) is a time when children should learn competition, compromise and cooperative s*ills that will enable them to move successfully through succeeding stages of development. A t( Prea!$&escece (starts with intimacy with a best friend to the beginning of puberty) is the stage wherein mista*es made are exceedingly difficult to overcome later. B t( Ear&' a!$&escece is when young people are motivated by both intimacy (usually for someone of the same gender) and lust (ordinarily for a person of the opposite sex). C t( Late a!$&escece is reached when people are able to direct their intimacy and lust toward another person. G t( 6uccessful completion of late adolescence culminates a!u&t($$!, a stage mar*ed by a stable love relationship. F4 -sychotherapists of 6ullivan+s psychotherapy serve as a participant observer and attempts to improve people+s interpersonalrelations. +e&aie D&ei: Ilein+s object relations theory assumes that the mother9child relationship during the first four or five months is the most critical time for personality development. $heories: Itera& )s'c(ic re)resetati$s $% ear&' si#i%icat $bjects, such as the mother+s breast or the father+s penis, is an important part of any relationship. !nfants absorb these psychic representations into their own psychic structure and then project them into an external object J the other person. $he e#$ which exists at birth ca sese b$t( !estructive a! &$vi# %$rces, i.e., both a nurturing and a frustrating breast. A !ua& i*a#e $% se&% results from infants+ splitting the destructive forces and the loving forces into good and bad while also splitting the ego. Su)ere#$ comes into existence much earlier than )reud had expeculated and that it grows along with the 1edipal process rather than being a product of it. $he child+s relationship with the mother plays a central role in the Oe!i)us c$*)&eE. 2uring the ear&' Oe!i)a& 'ears< the male child adopts a feminine position and has no fear of being castrated as punishment for his sexual feelings for his mother. %ater, he projects his destructive drive unt his father, who fears will bite or castrate him. 1edipus complex is resolved when the boy establishes good relationswith both parents and fees comfortable about his parents having sexual intercourse with one another. )emale child also adopts a feminine position in the E&e@tra sta#e. 6he ahs a positive feeling both for her mother+s breast and for her father+s ppenis, which she believes will FF feed her with babies. (ith most girls, however, the female .*e*tra complex is resolved without any antagonism or jealousy toward the mother. Eric@ Eri@s$: .ric* Homberger .ri*son is a post9)reudian theorist who proposed the eight psychosexual stages of development, explaining the challenges that are met throughout life. $heories: E)i#eetic Prici)&e. .ach component proceeds in a step fashion, with subseGuent growth building on earlier development. 2uring every stage, people experience an interaction of opposing syntonic and dystoniic attitudes which leads to a conflict or a psychosocial crisis. /esolution of this crisis produces an appropriate basic strength or ego Guality and enables a person to move to the next stage. H Sta#es $% Deve&$)*et 6tage , (birth9,@ months) J !nfancy: Trust vs. +istrust. !nfants face the first challenge of life, which is to establish a sense of trust that their world is a safe place. )amily members play *ey roles in how the child meets this challenge. 6tage B (,7 months94 years) J #hildhood: Aut$$*' vs. D$ubt a! S(a*e. $he next challenge is to learn the s*ills to confidently cope with the world. )ailure to gain self9control leads children to doubt their abilities. 6tage 4 (F9= years) J -reschool: Iititive vs. :ui&t. 2uring the play age, children experience genital9lpcomotor psychosexual development and undergo a psychosocial crisis of initiative versus guilt with either the basic strength of purpose or the core pathology of inhibition. 6tage F (A9,4 years) J -readolescence: I!ustri$usess vs. I%eri$rit'. #hildren enter school, ma*e friends and stri*e out on their own more. $hey feel proud of their F= accomplishments, or fear that they do not measure up. 6choolage children are in a period of sexual latency but face the psychosocial core pathology of inertia. 6tage = (teenage years) J Adolescence: I!etit' vs. C$%usi$. 2uring teen years, young people struggle to stablish their own identity with others, but they also want to be uniGue. Almost all teens experience some confusion as they struggle to stablish an identity because one+s clear and consistent sense of identity is expected to emerge during adolescence period. !dentity confusion may dominate the psychosocial crisis thereby postponing identity. )idelity is the basic strength of adolescence and role repudiation is its core pathology. 6tage A (,@94< years) J 8oung Adulthood: Iti*ac' vs. Is$&ati$. $he challenge is for young adults to form and maintain intimate relationships with others. )alling in love involves balancing the need to have a separate identity. $his stage is characterized by the psychosexual mode of genitality, the psychosocial crisis of intimacy versus isolation, the basic strength of love and the core pathology of exclusivity. 6tage > (4,9A<) J Diddle Adulthood: Di%%erece vs. Se&%2Abs$r)ti$. $he challenge is in contributing to the lives of others in the family, at wor* and in the larger world. )ailing at this, people become stagnant and caught up in their own limited concerns. $his stage is the time when people experience the psychosexual moode of procreativity, the psychosocial crisis of generativity versus stagnation, the basic strength of care and the core pathology of rejectivity. 6tage @ (A<9death) J %ate Adulthood"1ld Age: Ite#rit' vs. Des)air. 0ear the end of their lives, people hope to loo* bac* on what they have accomplished with a sense oof integrity and satisfaction. )or those who have been self9absorbed, old age brings only a sense of despair over missed opportunities. -sychosexual mode of generalized sensuality, crisis of integrity versus despair and the basic strength of wisdom or the core pathology of disdain mar* this final stage. ,.Bb "e(avi$ra& T(e$ries FA 5ehavioral theories of personality emphasize the importance of evir$*et or situational determinants of behavior. 5ehavior is shaped by environmental conditions through learning and, in turn, a person+s behavior shapes the environment. #ontemporary behavioral theories are called s$cia& &eari# or s$cia&2c$#itive te$ries which basic tenets is that people behave in ways that are li*ely to produce reinforcement and that individual differences in behavior result primarily from differences in the *inds of learning experiences a person encounters growing up. Leari# may be defined as a relatively permanent change in behavior that occurs as a result of practice and it has two basic types. C&assica& C$!iti$i# as a learning process was underta*en by Iva Pav&$v. !ts learning process involves association of a neutral stimulus with another stimulus through repeated pairings. O)erat C$!iti$i# is where certain responses are learned because they operate on, or affect, the environment. E.L. T($r!i@e: $horndi*e+s series of experiments at the turn of century mar*ed tah start of the study on $)erat c$!iti$i#. He was greatly influenced by 2arwin+s theory of evolution. $heories: .xperimented with a cat who appered to engage in a tria&2a! Ferr$r be(avi$r. (hen a re9ar! immediately follows one of those behaviors, learning is strengthened and reffered to this as the &a9 $% e%%ect. "urr(us Fre!eric S@ier: 5.). 6*inner is a behaviorist. He based his wor*, The Behavior of Organisms (,74@), on the principles of operant (observable) conditioning. F> $heories: (ith operant conditioning, the organism+s behavioral responses in a situation are reinforced or discouraged according to a system of rewards and punishments. !t can be used to control one+s own behavior as well as others+. An u!esirab&e be(avi$r exists because it is reinforced. .u&ia R$tter: /otter proposed the concept of behavior potential into the behaviorist approach. $heories: 5ehavior potential pertains to the li*elihood of occurrence of a specific behavior in a particular situation being determined by rei%$rce*et va&ue and eE)ectati$. 5ehavior of an individual in a situation would depend on the result of what developed last time he was in a similar situation. A&bert "a!ura: 5andura+s socialcognitive theory emphasizes reci)r$ca& !eter*iis* in which external determinants (e.g. rewards and punishments) and itera& !eter*iats (e.g. beliefs, thoughts and expectations) are parts of a system of interacting influences that affect both behavior and other parts of the system. $heories: Reci)r$cit'< wherein the environment affects behavior and behavior affects the environment determines re&ati$s(i)s. F@ (hen people act, they use symbols. $hrough the observation of the behavior of others, which were either rewarded or punished, people learn how to behave when caught in varied situations. 0.1c Hu*aistic T(e$ries Humanistic theories of personality adopt the holistic approach wherein the condition of a human being is viewed in its totality, ta*ing into account their physical, social and psychological components. Human potentials for self9direction and freedom of choice are maximized. Abra(a* H. +as&$9: .mphasized in his wor*, !otivation and "ersonality, is human freedom and man+s capacity for self9actualization. Hierarchy of needs is one of the *ey concepts advanced by Daslow. $hese needs are unchanging and genetic in origin. F7 $he need to fulfill one+s uniGue potential .steem needs: to achieve, be competent gain approval and recogiton -hysiological needs: to satisfy hunger, thirst and sex drives 6afety needs: to feel secure, safe and out of danger 5elongingness and love needs: to affiliate with others to be accepted and to belong 6elf9 Actualization 0eeds -sychol ogical 0eeds )undam ental 0eeds )igure ,. Daslow+s hierarchy of 0eeds !n his study of se&%2actua&i/ers; (men and women who have employed their products to the fullest) se&%2actua&i/ati$, he hoped to help people achieve hope, freedom, self9fulfillment and strong self9identities. $heories: He termed transient memories of self9actualization as )ea@ eE)erieces< characterized by happiness and fulfillment (a temporary nonstriving, nonself9 centered state of goal attainment). .xperiences nay occur in various contexts. /esponses may be termed as alive, perfect, uniGue, self9sufficient, and so forth. Car& Ras$* R$#ers: $heories: Actua&i/i# te!ec' is the basic force motivating an individual as J a tendency toward the fulfillment or the actualization of all the capacities of an individual to move towards maturity, growth and positive change. Rea& Se&% vs. I!ea& Se&% Se&% or se&%2c$ce)t is the central concept in /oger+s theory of personality. Rea& se&% contains ideas, perception and values characterized by &!' or &me', including an awareness of &what ! am' and &what ! can do' while i!ea& se&% is one+s conception of the *ind of person he"she would li*e to be. 0.1! C$#itive T(e$ries #ognitive theory focuses on &i%$r*ati$ )r$cessi#' and views each person as an &i%$r*ati$ )r$cess$r' (Cander Oanden, ,77>). $his theory deals with the cognitive structures and processes that allow a person to mentally represent events that transpire in the environment. .ea Pia#et: Mean -iaget, a 6wiss psychologist recognized as a giant of B< th century psychology, was most interested in the study of growing children and how they adjust to the world they live in. =< $heories: De' C$ce)ts $% C$#itive T(e$r' 6cheme Assimilation Accommodation .Guilibrium F$ur Sta#es $% C$#itive Deve&$)*et Ses$r'2+$t$r Sta#e (,9B years old). An individual experiences the word only through his senses: touch, taste, smell, sight, and hearing. Pre$)erati$a& Sta#e (B9A years old). $he individual first uses language and other symbols. $here is a lac* of understanding of abstract concepts the child cannot judge an object+s size, weight or volume. C$crete2O)erati$a& Sta#e (>9,, years old). An individual first perceives causal connections in his"her environment. A child focuses on how and why things happen and attaches more than one symbol to a particular event or object. F$r*a&2O)erati$a& Sta#e (,B years old and above). An individual thin*s abstractly and critically. A youngster begins to reason abstractly rather than thin*ing only of concrete situations, can understand events or situations more than their literal meaning and can understand the contextual or implied associations of situations and events. La9rece D$(&ber#: %awrence Iohlberg relates moral reasoning to -iaget+s model J how individuals judge situations as right or wrong. 2evelopment is again seen in stages. =, $heories: +$ra& Deve&$)*et Pre2c$veti$a& Leve&. $he childhood stage of value formation wherein children comply with the values of those who assert power over them, preconventional level is when young children experience the world in terms of pain and pleasure. &/ightness' amounts to &what feels good' to them. C$veti$a& Leve&. $he youth stage in value formation when the adolescents identify with their peers, idols and teachers due to interpersonal communication. 8oung people lose some of their selfishness as they learn to define right and wrong in terms of what pleases their parents and what are consistent with broader cultural norms. $hey try to assess intentions or ends in reaching moral judgments instead of simply observing what others do right. P$st2c$veti$a& Leve&. $he adulthood stage when individuals internalize the values they have imbibed in the first two stages without fear. +a&e reas$i# J rule9based have a justice perspective relying on formal rules or regulations to define right and wrong. Fe*a&e reas$i# J person9based have a care and responsibility perspective judging a situation with focus towards personal relationships and loyalties. Car& .u#: Mung+s wor* on analytic psychology is an echo of )reud+s own wor*. $heories: $he )ers$a& uc$sci$us is formed by the repressed experiences of a particular individual and is the reservoir of the complexes. Humans inherit a c$&&ective uc$sci$us that helps shape many of their attitudes, behaviors and dreams. Arc(et')es are contents of the collective unconscious. =B H basic t')es $% arc(et')es 0. Pers$a represents the part of personality that people show to the rest of the world. -sychologically healthy people recognize their persona but do not mista*e it for the whole personality. 1. S(a!$9 3. Ai*a is the feminine side of men responsible for many of their irrational moods and feelings. A. Ai*us is the masculine side of women responsible for their irrational thin*ing and illogical opinions. B. :reat *$t(er is the archetype of fertility and destruction. C. Wise $&! *a is the the intelligent but deceptive voice of accumulated experience. G. Her$ is the unconscious image of a person who conGuers an evil foe but who also has a tragic flaw. H. Se&% is the archetype of completeness, wholeness and perfection. $he two attitudes of itr$versi$ and eEtr$versi$ can combine with any one or more of the four functions (,) t(i@i#, (B) %ee&i#, (4) sesati$ and (F) ituiti$ to produce the eight basic archetypes. Drea* aa&'sis and active i*a#iati$ are used to discover the content of a patient+s collective unconscious. Car$& :i&&i#a: #arol ;illigan compared the moral development of boys and girls and concluded that the two se#es use different standards of -iaget+s sensory motor stage of moral development $heories: "ri#i# :e!er =4 ;illigan notes that impersonal rules have long governed men+s lives in the wor*place, whereas personal relationships are more relevant to women+s lives as they ta*e the roles of wives, mothers and caregivers. :e$r#e De&&': $heories: !ndividuals are characaterized on !i*esi$s (judgement, categorizing, labelling and interpreting) they themselves built to interpret themselves and their social worlds also *nown as the personal construct theory. 2ifferences in personality are results of differences in behavior. Se&%2Sc(e*as Sc(e*a is a cognitive structure that helps us perceive, organize, process and utilize information (At*inson, B<<<). !t is stable, differs in each individual and can be used to explain differences in personality Se&%2sc(e*a, the most important schema, consists of cognitive generalizations about the self derived from past experiences. 0.1e Ev$&uti$ar' Pers$a&it' T(e$r' $he evolutionary personality theory ppresicts that men and women loo* for different features when selecting a potential mate (5urger, B<<,). Advocates of this theory thin* of romantic relationships in terms of male and female members of a species getting together to eventually reproduce. -arental investment is the concern when choosing a p9artner. 5ecause both sexes have different ideas about parental investment, the theory predicts that they loo* for various characteristics in their mates. $his theory proposes intersexual selection, which is the competition among members of the same gender for mating acces to the best members of the opposite gender (5urger, B<<,). =F $his theory shows that men are more li*ely to consider physical attractiveness when selecting a dating partner or spouse. $hey also prefer a younger partner. 1n the other hand, women have preference for a man who possess resources to raise a family. 0.1% Ev$&uti$ar' A!a)tati$ T(e$r' $he behaviors of individuals are studied in the evolutionary adaptation theory from a biological point of view. $he theory relies heavily on #harles 2arwin+s evolutionary theory. -roponents of this theory stressed that evolution applies not only to anatomy and physiology, but also to predispositions for certain types of behavior. !ndividuals are said to be genetically prepared for some responses in particular situations. 1. A#ets $% S$cia&i/ati$ .very social experience, which may come from social institutions li*e the family, school, church"religion and government"politics peer group, mass media and health services available to individuals, affects the individual in one way or another. 0.a A#ecies a! t')es $% s$cia&i/ati$ Fa*i&'. $he basic social unit the first school of life and love the seedbed of values and &nurturer of human nature' the family has the greatestvimpact on the individual. !t is the most influential agent of socializatyion and plays a pivotal role in shaping the personality of children. $hus, the family is the main lin* between the individual and society. Here is where the child is oriented into the culture of a group J its norms, goals, types of concensus, and sanctions. -arents do the delicate tas* of personality formation by inculcating values and role modeling and guiding them to personnal integrity, civic consciousness and social responsibility.performamc eof socially accepted behavior is rewarded, while the socially undesirable ones are punished. Hence, the family is an ever9 pervasive influence on the individual+s behavior, even up to adulthood. Sc($$&. $he second home of children where teachers, by principle of loco parentis, are their second parents, the school is the primary agent for weaning children from home and == introducing them to the society. 6chooling broadens children+s social milieu and expands their interactions with people of different personality traits while learning the *nowledge, s*ills, values and attitudes expected of them which would prepare them for life ahead. $he school reinforces what the family misses. Peer :r$u). A social group whose members have common interests, social position and age, and have the same economic standing in the community, peer group has a uniGue understanding of how to behave and trying to escape direct supervision from adults. As an influencing factor in socialization, the peer group arises from the individual+s need to belong and be recognized. Cigor is built into man+s nature s a social being. -eer pressure exists such that a child or a teenager conform his or her behavior to the behavior of his or her peers in order to belong and be accepted in the peer group. 5ecause of the powerful influence the group may have, to avoid negative influences on its members peer group needs adult guidance to serve as a chec* and balance and to direct its members+ potentials and activities toward wholesome endeavors. +ass +e!ia. An impersonal communication aimed at a vast audience, either print or broadcast mass media plays an important role in the socialization process. $he term &media' comes from the %atin word middle, suggesting that media serves to lin* or connect people of different races and religious affiliations. $he wide array of informations brought about by technology in the !nformation Age either positively or negatively influence the way people thin* and act. C(urc(5Re&i#i$. An agent of socialization *nown as &conscience formators' of people, church is a social institution entrusted with the tas* of teaching morality to individuals and groups who reach out to others and learn obligations toward self, family, church, society and ;od. /eligion refers to a set of beliefs concerning the cause, nature and purpose of the universe. Ecu*eis*< i.e., different religions strongly encouraged to be friendly and tolerant with one another, is encouraged in a democratic society. :$ver*et5P$&itics. !ndividuals belonging to the other societal agencies continue to expand their social interaction and learn to obey laws and perform social functions in the community with civic consciousness and commitment. /espect for authority, or officials =A in the government, is fostered and bureaucracy which started in school is more understood. ;overnment and politics exist in all human organizations, groups, or societies, but in form both have different dimentions. -olitics refer to the processes in society the way people manage thaie affairs and activities in society. ;overnment, on the other hand, is the organization through which the state expresses and enforces its will. A government exists for the good of its constituents. !t is there to protect its people from harm, ensure safety and security, as well as promote their economic, cultural, moral, and social wellbeing. Hea&t( Sect$r. Health affects the way a person behaves and interacts with others. $hat is why the health sector providing health services also affects the socialization process of the individual. A person suffering from illness limits his"her social functions and social activities. A healthy person, on the other hand, has the vigor to join social functions and civic activities. 6tudy ;uide: => #HA-$./ !!! #3%$3/. Objectives: ;ain an understanding of some of the positive and negative aspects of the concepts of culture and society and a sense of the wide range of topics that can be described as aspects of a particular culture or society. A. W(at is Cu&tureI As illustrated in the excerpt above, culture is an important part of our lives. !t tells us how to cooperate among groups of people and how to survive as a species. #ulture is defined as a body of learned behaviors shared by individuals within a society. !t is made up of shared values< norms< and beliefs as well as material objects such as tools, automobiles, televisions, shoes, and anything else that is made by humans. $he %atin root of the wordcultura means &to cultivate.' (e humans shape or cultivate the world around us to suit our needs. #ulture is something that we cannot live without. #ulture is also about species survival. (hat ma*es us different from other animals is that rather than living on instincts, we must rely on culture for survival. 5irds instinctively *now to fly south for the winter, and bears *now that they need to hibernate to survive harsh climates. Humans, however, cannot survive harsh climates unless we learn from one another how to change our environment to suit our needs. !f you were to be dropped off in the desert with no *nowledge of how to survive, would you be able to? $he 5ushmen of the Ialahari 2esert have survived the climate of the desert for many years. $heir culture is an important tool for survival. $hey have extensive *nowledge of their environment and can locate water sources and identify animal trac*s in the sand. $hey are a Hunter";atherer society which is one of the oldest and smallest societies in the world. $hey are a sharing culture and live as nomads, traveling in small bands or tribes. .very element found in their culture is a tool for survival. =@ ". C$*)$ets $% Cu&ture $he various constituent elements of the culture are norms, values and material culture. .ach element contributes to cultural life. 0. N$r*s. !n our common everyday activities li*e eating, dressing, coo*ing, sleeping, schooling, and wor*ing, and in some special occasions li*e #hristmas, fiestas, weddings, or burials, there are rules or standards of behavior expected of us to be followed. $hese are called norms. Homans (,7=<) defines norms as &an idea in the minds of the members of a group, an idea that can be put in the form of a statement specifying what the other members or men should do, ought to do, or are expected to do under the certain circumstances.' (hat is important in a norm is that any departure from it is followed by some punishment or sanction. 0orms prescribes proper ways of behaving for a number of situations. !n some situations, whether the norms are followed or not is unimportant as in the fol*ways. !n other cases, it is important that they are followed, as in the mores. $hey are the group+s or society+s standards of morality, propriety, ethics, and legality. $hey are important for the formation and existence of groups they define the tas*s and group expections to ma*e group activity and cooperation possible. $hey are followed automatically, although their existence may be Guestioned by some from time to time. $hey also influence the emotions and perceptions of individuals. %i*e any aspectst of the culture, norms may vary from society to society or from one group to another in societies. 0orms differ according to the age, sex, religion, or race of the group. (hat may be appropriate behavior in one culture may be disrespectful or inappropriate in another culture. Prescri)tive $r*s are those which are right, legal, ethical, good, proper, moral and appropriate. Pr$scri)tive $r*s are those which are unethical, wrong, bad, immoral, illegal, iappropriate and improper. =7 1. F$&@9a's are customary ways of behaving which usually have no particular moral significance. !t is the general rules and customary and habitual ways followed without much thought given to the matter. )ol*ways are accumulated and repetitive patterns of expected behavior and tend to be self9 perpetuating. 6ome evolve into the present form out of a slow but continuous process of trial and experimentation. 6ome are rational, some are irrational. !t include such innumerable group expectations as rules of eating, sleeping, dressing, coo*ing, studying, wor*ing, modes of greetings and farewell, rituals and ceremonies in institutional setting. )ol*ways, however, tend to have strong controlling power over the behavior and social activities of the individual which become regulative for the succeeding geeeenerations and ta*e on the character of social force. $hey may change slowly or fast. $hey may be modified or discarded, and new ones may emerge. 3. +$res are strongly9held or specials norms which are essential to the welfare of the people and their cherished values. $hey have moral or ethical value. Dores consists in large part of taboos. .nforcement of the mores ta*es the form of negative sanctions. Ciolation of the mores is considered immoral, unethical or sinful and may be ostracized, exiled, orexecuted. Tab$$s are acts which are forbidden or prohited. A. La9s are formalized norms formulated by a governing body. 6ome of the mores are enacted into laws and enforced by political and legalauthorities. 6ome laws which are not based on the mores are difficult to enforce. $he violators of the law are punished by fine, imprisonment, or death. Re9ar!s are positive sanctions for those who behave properly Puis(*ets are are negative sanctions for those who behave improperly. Sacti$s are rewards for conformity. !n order for the members of society to conform or behave in ways prescribed for them, there are ways and means to ma*e them do so. #onformity is attained through the use of sanctions or a system of rewards and punishment. A< I%$r*a& sacti$s F are gossip, unfavorable or favorable public opinion, giving or withdrawal of affective love or friendship. F$r*a& sacti$s F are used for violation s of norms in organizations or associations. )ormal positive sanction may be a promotion, salary increase, medals of honor, or other merit awards and citations. )ormal negative sanction may be demotion, removal from office, fine or jail sentence. B. +ateria& cu&ture refers to the the physical, tangible, and concrete objects produced by man. $hey are the product of some cultural activity. 5ehind the artifact or material object is the pattern of culture that gave form to the idea or the artifact, its use or function, and the techniGues for using or applying it. La#ua#e is the central feature of all human cultures. !t is a purely human and noninstinctive method of communicating ideas, emotions and drives by means of voluntarily produced symbols. %anguage, considered as the most important channel for communication, is a medium for determining society+s values. !t holds people together and is vital for cross9cultural understanding. !t promotes and perpetuates one+s cultural heritage and expresses national identity and history. Tec($&$#' refers to the techniGues and *nowledge in utilizing raw materials to produce food, tools, clothing, shelter, means of transportation and weapon. -a&ues are those standards by which a group society judges the desirability and importance of persons. $hey are concepts which we use as points of reference or criteria for recognizing, expressing and evaluating social realities in the environment in terms of their desirability, importance, significance, worth, Guality, merit, price, and usefulness to us. Calues are generalized conceptions of the desirable and describe what members of society consider to be desirable, good, right, and important. $hey are so general that they do not specify appropriate ways of thin*ing, feeling, or behaving and they constitute the A, foundations of social conscience or a whole way of life of a society. $hey underlie the norms of the society and give the culture its unity, form and identity. Calues influence the modes of behavior, thin*ing, and feeling. C. C(aracteristics $% Cu&ture 0. Cu&ture is s$cia&. #ulture does not exist in isolation. !t is a product of society. !t develops through social interaction. 0o man can acGuire culture without association with others. Dan becomes a man only among men. 1. Cu&ture is s(are!. #ulture is not something that an individual alone can possess. #ulture in sociological sense is shared. )or example, customs, traditions, beliefs, ideas, values, morale etc. are all shared by people of a group or society. 3. Cu&ture is a #r$u) )r$!uct. #ulture is the result of a group+s habits and experiences, passed on to succeeding generations for posterity. A. Cu&ture is &eart. #ulture is not inborn. !t is learnt. #ulture is often called Hlearned ways of behaviourH. 3nlearned behaviour is not culture. Dan acGuires culture through learning via language and writing, enabling them to pass this to succeeding generations. B. Cu&ture is tras*issive. #ulture is transmissive as it is transmitted from one generation to another. %anguage is the main vehicle of culture. %anguage in different form ma*es it possible for the present generation to understand the achievement of earlier generations. $ransmission of culture may ta*e place by imitation as well as by instruction. Cu&ture is c$tiu$us a! cu*u&ative. #ulture exists as a continuous process. !n its historical growth it tends to become cumulative. 6ociologist %inton called culture Ethe social heritageE of man. !t becomes difficult for us to imagine what society would be li*e without culture. Cu&ture varies %r$* s$ciet' t$ s$ciet'. .very society has a culture of its own. !t differs from society to society. #ulture of every society is uniGue to itself. #ultures are not uniform. #ultural elements li*e customs, traditions, morale, values, beliefs are not uniform AB everywhere. #ulture varies from time to time also. #ulture is diverse that each culture is different, hence, individuals must be cautious to avoid assuming that their way of doing things is the only right or practical way. Cu&ture is !'a*ic. 0o culture ever remains constant or changeless. !t is subject to slow but constant change. #ulture is responsive to the changing conditions of the physical world. Hence culture is dynamic. Cu&ture is #rati%'i#. #ulture provides proper opportunities for the satisfaction of our needs and desires. 1ur needs both biological and social are fulfilled in the cultural ways. #ulture determines and guides various activities of man. $hus, culture is defined as the process through which human beings satisfy their wants. Cu&ture is )attere! a! ite#rate!. A unified or integrated culture is one where there is conformity between ideal norms and actual behavior. $he members+ biological, psychological and social needs are met. Cu&ture is a!a)tive a! *a&a!a)tive. #ulture is adaptive when used by man to ma*e the environment viable for a stable economy. !n contrast, culture is maladaptive when scarce resources are destroyed or depleted. Cu&ture is c$*)u&s$r'. #ulture restrains man from violating existing rules and regulations of society. Dembers of a group have to follow the group+s culture if they wish to be in harmony with one onother. D. Issues i U!ersta!i# Cu&ture 0. Subcu&tures are small groups within the society that act and behave differently from the rest. 1. C$utercu&tures, also reffered to as &contra9culture,' results from the opposition and conflict between the larger society and the group. 3. I!i$cu&tures, a culture created by every group, is a system of customs, behavior, beliefs and *nowledge created through group interactions. !t is formed from the moment of interaction among group members and may be said to consist largely of idiosyncracies that are the said A4 group members+ common denominators. !ts members, after being together for an extended period, would have developed their own program and set of practices that would seem alien to outsiders. A. Cu&ture s($c@ is the term used for the feeling of unpleasantness or disorientation experienced when one goes to an unfamiliar setting. !nitial reactions of being culture shoc*ed are anxiety, stress, frustration and dismay. Accompanying symptoms of culture shoc* are fear of being alone, loneliness, being contaminated by viruses, and feeling of being laughed at or cheated. An individual may experience culture shoc* even in his own country. #ulture shoc* is also experienced by sociologists and anthropologists who do field wor* in a different country, as well as by tourists, exchange students, missionaries, migrants, and most commonly, by overseas wor*ers. B. Cu&tura& !iversit'. Carious factors account for the diversity of culture. (hile men all over the world have similar biological drives and needs, the ways of meeting, the ways of meeting them differ. .ach culture adapts to its environment in its distinctive way. 2ifference in geographical characteristics accounts for social and cultural differences. -eople coming from varying climates and topography are sometimes said to exhibit differences in character traits. $he presence or absence of certain natural resources is also considered as a crucial factor in determining the socio9economic development of a community. However, while geography may influence a nation+s development, its influence is minimal it is unable to determine the form of society or influence its culture because man can alter it to some degree. #ulture plays an important role in molding and shaping one+s way of life. Habits, attitudes, and the li*es are culturally defined. 2efinitions of appropriate behavior are culturally prescribed. -eople+s view or perspective of circumstances or problems differs from one society to another. -eople+s behavior can therefore be understood in terms of their culture. AF All cultures have developed out of shared human activities centering on common needs or problems. However, we can only understand culture by loo*ing at their totality as represented in the symbolic system that provides reality for the people who share the culture and not by loo*ing only at its part. C. Cu&tura& re&ativit' states that culture is relative J it is neither good nor bad. )rom the facts about cultural diversity emerged the principle of cultural variation. Anthropologists, from their extensive studies, hold that there is no single universal standard to be used to judge any culture+s way of life. $he exact opposite of ethnocentrism, cultural relativism views that a cultural practice is neither good nor bad in itself and that its desirability depends upon their meaning, value and function in the culture which they are part of. All cultures have customs, practices and traits which may be viewed as offewnsive and eccentric by other cultures. $his notion views each culture as being a uniGue adjustment to a particular set of circumstances. !ts principle is that every culture must be judged by its own standards, and a culture pattern or trait must be viewed in terms of its meaning, function or significance in the culture of which it is a part. 6o, before considering certain culture traits or patterns as ridiculous, improper or wrong, we have to consider its meaning in the culture to which it belongs. !n such a way, we develop understanding and tolerance for people in another culture. G. Et($cetris* is the tendency to believe that oneEs ethnic or cultural group is centrally important, and that all other groups are measured in relation to oneEs own. $he ethnocentric individual will judge other groups relative to his or her own particular ethnic group or culture, especially with concern to language, behavior, customs, and religion. $hese ethnic distinctions and sub9divisions serve to define each ethnicityEs uniGue cultural identity. (hy then is ethnocentrism bad? .thnocentrism leads us to ma*e false assumptions about cultural differences. (e are ethnocentric when we use our cultural norms to ma*e generalizations about other peoplesE cultures and customs. 6uch generalizations J often made without a conscious awareness that weEve used our culture as a universal yardstic* J can be A= way off base and cause us to misjudge other peoples. !t also leads us to ma*e premature judgments such as &They may not be very good at what we are best at.' 5y evaluating them by what we are best at, we miss the many other aspects of life that they often handle more competently than we do. Hence, ethnocentrism can lead to cultural misinterpretation and it often distorts communication between human beings. H. ,e$cetris* is the opposite of ethnocentrism which means preferring ideas and things from other cultures over ideas and things from your own culture. !t is the belief that one+s own lifestyle, ideas or products are inferior. At the heart of xenocentrism is an assumption that other cultures are superior to your own. J. Te*)$r$cetris*< the belief that one+s own time is more important than the past or future, is prevalent among people who lac* historical perspective. 0K. Cu&ture uiversa&s< practices found in every culture, are similarities in the broad areas of culture. !ts existence can be accounted for by: "i$&$#ica& si*i&arities. $he occurrence of similar culture patterns may be azttributed to similarities in biological structures and drives. Necessar' )rere=uisites %$r s$cia& &ivi#. !n order to function, each society must fulfill certain reGuirements. .very culture has some *ind of world view or explanation of the world, as perceived by the members of society, and some *ind of religion trherefore. Ps'c(ic uit' $% *a@i!. All human beings are ali*e in having similar ranges of emotions, in the need for security and response, in being subject to conditioning, and in having a symbolic language. $his psychic unity is a source of cultural similarities but does not determine specific adaptations or identical cultural patterns. :e$#ra)(ica& evir$*et. ;eographical environment is characterized by certain limitations and possibilities. As a result, there are similarities in meeting man+s needs and solving common problems. AA CHAPTER I- "ASIC SOCIAL INSTITUTIONS A social institution is a complex, integrated set of social norms organized around the preservation of a basic societal value. 1bviously, the sociologist does not define institutions in the same way as does the person on the street. %ay persons are li*ely to use the term HinstitutionH very loosely, for churches, hospitals, jails, and many other things as institutions. 6ociologists often reserve the term HinstitutionH to describe normative systems that operate in five basic areas of life, which may be designated as the primary institutions. (,) !n determining Iinship (B) in providing for the legitimate use of power (4) in regulating the distribution of goods and services (F) in transmitting *nowledge from one generation to the next and (=) in regulating our relation to the supernatural. !n shorthand form, or as concepts, these five basic institutions are called the family, government, economy, education and religion. $he five primary institutions are found among all human groups. $hey are not always as highly elaborated or as distinct from one another, but, in rudimentary form at last, they exist everywhere. $heir universality indicates that they are deeply rooted in human nature and that they are essential in the development and maintenance of orders. 6ociologists operating in terms of the functionalist model society have provided the clearest explanation of the functions served by social institutions. Apparently there are certain minimum tas*s that must be performed in all human groups. 3nless these tas*s are performed adeGuately, the group will cease to exist. An analogy may help to ma*e the point. (e might hypothesize that cost accounting department is essential to the operation of a large corporation. A company might procure a superior product and distribute it then at the price which is assigned to it, the company will soon go out of business. -erhaps the only way to avoid this is to have a careful accounting of the cost of each step in the production and distribution process. :eera& Fucti$s $% S$cia& Istituti$ 0. !nstitution 6atisfy the 5asic needs of 6ociety 1. !nstituttion define dominant social values. &5ills of /ights' A> 3. !nstitutions establish permanent patterns of 6ocial 5ehavior monogamy A. !nstitutions support other institutions. &Adultery' B. !nstitutions provide roles for individuals. Husband and wife. A. Re&i#i$ a! S$ciet' /eligions, whatever their form, can have major social impact in some societies 9 for good or for evil. 1f course in some religions any social impact they have may be secondary or incidental to their main declared aim of relating people to ;od. $his site is not here concerned with considering the religious aspect of religions, but only with considering their impact on society. And the social impact of religions is normally less to do with the religion itself than its institutional form or church. $he social impact of any one religion in any society is strongly affected by whether it is supported by the majority of the population or by a minority. A majority religion not only directly impacts more people, but is also li*ely to have substantial impact on government and on society values. ;enerally it is the poorest societies that have the greatest proportion of the population supporting religion, though that may mean several religions rather than one religion. 5ut for religionEs social impact, the major difference will often be between poorer societies and less9poor societies. A@ Poorer Societies. /eligions generally have greater social impact in poorer societies, where they tend to be supported more strongly by the majority. 1ften one religion will predominate and will have substantial effect on the government 9 either the religion controlling the government, or the government using the religion in a majority9poverty society. !t is this type of situation that Iarl Darx referred to when he stated that H/eligion is the opium of the massesH. Any religion that has a Ebetter afterlifeE will tend to help the poor to live with their poverty and perhaps with exploitation and government oppression. 6o the poor will tend to more strongly support religion, and governments in poor societies can tend to encourage or use religion to help maintain social control. #hurches as institutions tend to support governments and the wealthy who can finance churches better than poor believers can. !n these societies religions will help maintain a social order that can include exploitation and oppression. (hile a religion can be an ally of government or a tool of government, there are of course cases of a religion gaining control over government and effectively being government, and this often means church policies dominating a society 9 especially Espread our religionE. $his can mean other religions being oppressed and wars being encouraged or started against other religions. #hristian .urope saw anti9heretic and anti9witch oppression and crusade wars against E!nfidelsE, moving to missionary9led worldwide oppressive colonisations 9 and societies motivated by other religions have done similar. And where a poor society had substantial support for two or more religions then fierce civil wars have often resulted. An additional issue when a religion controls government is that they are often lac*ing in the *inds of s*ills needed for efficient government, lac*ing s*ills in business, in dealings, in compromising and in handling opponents. 6o with the best intentions, religious government often achieves little actual good. A7 $ews. $he world economic crisis that hit in B<<7 sees poorer countries being hit by dramatic declines in trade and in foreign investment, and their poor facing more hardship now. $his economic downturn seems to have increased the abandonment of children and of elderly women in poorer countries, and to have increased the murder of children and of elderly women in poorer countries. 1ften with EjustificationsE that they are witches or devil9possessed, with total annual numbers estimated to be some millions. Less-poor Societies. !n less9poor societies, religions generally are not supported as widely or as strongly as in poor societies, and many people will generally have less social problems also. $here is somewhat less of a social need for religion, and generally religion has a somewhat wea*er social impact. (here the poor have become a minority, support for a formerly majority religion tends to coming predominantly from the non9poor and shrin*s among the poor who see the church as having deserted them. Dany of the minority poor will tend to switch to other minority religions, while the mainstream religion continues to give wea*ened support for a social order that can include social exclusion of the poor and other minorities. Minority Religion. However, religions can often be socially at their best where they are a minority religion 9 especially if the minority concerned is oppressed or socially excluded. $hen the church may have a useful role in socially supporting that minority. $he church will be seen as independent of government and of the wealthy, and be seen as Eour churchE. !n this case the minority religion may also be able to somewhat press government to moderate the social exclusion of that minority. !n the modern richer countries which have seen a general shrin*age in support for religion, there has also tended to be an increase in the diversity of religions with particular religions associated with particular social classes or with particular minorities. Charities. !n many societies there are charities that have been set up often by churches or religious individuals, and by others. $hese charities generally aim to somehow help some people with some problems. 6ometimes their good intentions do actually achieve a lot of real good, sometimes a little good and sometime more harm than good. >< 1ne main problem with charities is that they are often run by people who do not really understand the needs of those they are meant to help. #harities for the poor are generally run by the rich. 6ome do try to find out what help is really needed but many charities only do what they thin* is needed and get it very wrong. !nstead of giving training a charity may give food, and instead of helping a family a charity may split9up the family. 1f course government EhelpE will often have similar problems and often also do little real good. The social significance of different religions. $he relative social significance of different religions in the world today is perhaps somewhat difficult to estimate. 6tatistics indicate #hristianity as currently having the worldEs largest number of supporters, around 44P, and as being concentrated more in richer countries. 5ut at present !slam seems a close second on number of supporters, about BBP, with Hinduism in third place at around ,=P. #urrently 5uddhist supporters seem to follow on about AP, with #hinese $raditionalism at around FP and Mudaism at only about <.BP. However, these numbers do not fully ta*e account of the fact that most religions are divided between often many different competing churches. And these numbers do not ta*e account of strength of support 9 for some religions including many more nominal or marginal supporters than for other religions. Also some religions may help or encourage business or political action more by its members, than other religions do. ;enerally it seems that the social impact of religions is tending to fall as countries get richer, but much of the world does still remain in poverty with religions having much influence. 01$.. 6ome religions have a E;od made the universe and man*indE creation story and, despite the fact that such religious stories are about ;od and do not claim to be science, some see a claimed conflict with evolution science. !nterestingly the Mewish9#hristian creation story involves man*ind (many of whom are very ungodly) being created Ein the image of the ma*erE and then immediately the ma*er Eends his wor* and restsE. $his loo*s Guite li*e the development of an intelligent species progressing to ma*ing robots in their own image to do their wor* 9 li*e the development of man*ind, or of another intelligent alien species ? >, 5. :$ver*et a! La9 At one point, the study of politics was considered to be merely a part of the study of social organization, owing perhaps to the holistic nature of the discipline. %ater, however, anthropologists interested in political studies wor*ed hard towards the recognition of political anthropology as a subdivision of social anthropology. !ts reclassification emanates from the contention that )$&itics be#i 9(ere @is(i) e!s. Here the interplay of other factors into the political organization was seen.it is the maintenance or establishment of social order with territorial framewor*, by the organized exercise of coercive authority through the use or the possibility of use of physical force. P$&itica& $r#ai/ati$ is a part of the total organization concerned with the preservation of social order within a specified territory by a duly recognized authority. !n many instances, the said authorities are recognized through formal election, while in some tribal societies, the basis or criteria for their designations are informal and loose. Criteria $% &ea!ers i a triba& s$ciet'. Hunting and gathering societies throughout the world are classified as ba!s composed mostly of *insmen. Dembers ranged from 4<9 ,<< and hardly had any concept of property (except for personal possessions li*e clothes, weapons, and tools used for economic activities). 6ince survival reGuired them to move from palce to place at certains seasons of the year, made it imposible for these nomadic band to establish a formal government. $hus, informally, among themselves, they recognized as &ea!ers the best (uters, the e&!est (because of their *nowledge of tradition), or the str$#est who did not only serve to provide the group with subsistence and economic training but those who had a complete grasp of the tradition also served as adjucators in case of conflicts within the groups and perhaps with outsiders. 6ince the bands were composed of *insmen, cases brought to the attention of leaders were those which basically concern their day9to9day activities. Doreover, since the laws of these groupswere unwritten, and since one criterion used in the recognition of a leader was his *nowledge of tradition and recollection of cases in the past, solutions were then arrived by using past cases as the bases for deciding cases. >B C&arri%'i# re&ati$s(i)s bet9ee ec$$*ic a! activities a! *$!es $% #$ver*et. 6ince there is a correlation between economic activities and political organization, primary problems among band socities are also centered around territories, the distribution of resources and relations between bands. .ach band has its customary range or sovereign area, to which it is lin*ed by practical economic considerations, by history and sentiment, and usually by mythological and religious associations. Ciolations of the well9defined rules governing the use of territory and its accompanying resources as well as the relations of the group to neighboring units become the basic concern of the leader. C. Ec$$*' $he ec$$*' is the institution that provides for the production and distribution of goods and services, which people in every society need. 6ometimes they can provide these things for themselves, and sometimes they rely on others to provide them. (hen people rely on others for goods or services, they must have something to exchange, such as currency (in industrialized societies) or other goods or services (in nonindustrialized societies). $he customs surrounding exchange and distribution of good and services shape societies in fundamental ways. +acr$s$ci$&$#' vs. *icr$s$ci$&$#'. 6ociologists use two approaches when studying society. !n *acr$s$ci$&$#', sociologists analyze large9scale social forces, such as institutions. $hey identify and analyze the structure of societies. $he second approach sociologists use is *icr$s$ci$&$#', the study of social interaction. $hese sociologists focus on face9to9face interaction, how people act around others. $his method is focused more on individuals than groups. Ec$$*ic S'ste*s. $he two dominant economic systems in the world are capitalism and socialism. Dost societies have varying blends of the two systems. #ommon hybrids of capitalism and socialism are welfare capitalism and state capitalism. Capitalism. !t is a system under which resources and means of production are privately owned, citizens are encouraged to see* profit for themselves, and success or failure of an enterprise is determined by free9mar*et competition. >4 We&%are ca)ita&is* is a system that features a market-based economy coupled with an etensi!e social welfare system that includes free health care and education for all citi"ens. State ca)ita&is* is a system under which resources and means of production are pri!ately owned but closely monitored and regulated by the go!ernment. S$cia&is* vs. Ca)ita&is*. 0o one economic system has succeeded in satisfying all the needs of its citizens. 6everal economic studies over the past few generations have shown that, in general, citizens in societies with capitalist economies enjoy a higher standard of living than those in socialist societies. +arE;s Ec$$*ic T(e$r'. -hilosopher and historian Iarl Darx believed that the economy was the basic institution of society and that all other institutions, such as family and education, served to fuel the economy. As societies became more industrialized, he theorized, they also became more capitalistic. Darx disli*ed the fact that capitalism created a two9tiered system consisting of factory owners and factory wor*ers, in which the groups were constantly in conflict with each other. )actory owners wanted to pay their wor*ers as little as possible to maximize profits. )actory wor*ers, on the other hand, wanted to ma*e as much money as possible. $he advantage was always with the owners, who could choose to fire wor*ers who wanted too much and hire wor*ers who would wor* for less. Darx was a c$%&ict t(e$rist, believing that in any capitalist society there was always conflict between the owners of the means of production and the wor*ers. He believed that the only way to resolve the conflict was for wor*ers to unite, mount a revolution, and overthrow their oppressors. Darx believed that once the dust settled after the revolution, all societies would bec$**uist, meaning that all the means of production would be owned by everyone and all profits would be shared eGually by everyone. His ideas inspired the /ussian /evolution of ,7,>. >F Ec$$*ic Tre!s. $he ways the world and the 3.6. economies wor* are changing rapidly. $here are several important trends: a. :&$ba&i/ati$: $he expansion of economic activity across many borders characterizes the global economy. -oorer, developing nations now produce the raw materials for the world+s multinational corporations. $hese multinational companies control most of the world+s economy. b. De*a! %$r e!ucate! )r$%essi$a&s: $he postindustrial economy is driven by trained professionals such as lawyers, communications professionals, doctors, and teachers. c. Se&%2e*)&$'*et: 0ew, affordable communications technology has allowed more people to go into business for themselves. d. Diversit' i t(e 9$r@)&ace: 1nce the bastion of white males, professional offices are heavily populated by women and minorities in today+s society. 2. E!ucati$ .ducation plays a large part in the socialization of children into a society. Dost of the child+s day through these years is devoted to activities involving school such as attending classes, doing homewor*, and participating in extracurricular activities. $he school format is designed to teach children to be productive members of society. 6chools bear most of the responsibility of preparing young people for the wor*ing environment. #hildren learn from punctuality, time management, and to respect the authority of their teacher whish prepares them to respect their boss. $he curriculum also plays an mportant role. A class in civics teaches a child to be a good citizen, and a class in home economics teaches a child how to operate a household. Dost socialization, however, occurs beyond the curriculum. .xtra curricular activities such as student government, being a part of a school news paper, or being in a business club provide anticipatory socialization for adult jobs. .ducation and deviance have a close relation ship. $he education system serves different purposes in regard to deviance. )oremost, education is a detterent for deviance. #hild learns very early about crime and punishment. $hey learn in the curriculum but they also learn it in a particular way. $hey are punished from cheating, fighting, and other deviant behaviors. >= $herefore, eduction system plays a vital role in social control by producing compliant citizens that understand what deviance is and how to avoid it. Although education is used as a tool to deter deviance, it can un*nowingly perpetuate it as well. !f a child is labeled as stupid, a teacher expects less out of that child. $he mainstream peer population avoids any peer that is deviant. $hus, these students feel that their only identity is their so9called deviant behavior. !t seems to the child that they will never be able to escape this label, so they continue with the behavior that is considered deviant. 6ocial stratification and education are tightly lin*ed. 6chools may promote social ineGuality by limiting the opportunities of women, minorities, and those in the lower classes. $his can be caused by purposeful discrimination, but more often it is because the social institution of education has sexism and racism built into it. 6tudy after study has shown that students from upper classes consistently do better in school and continue their education, whereas lower classes students do not have the same success. 6chools perpetuate gender and race stratification as well. 5oys tend to receive more encouragement to ta*e more math and science as well as more advanced courses that girls do. in the professional world, women are shut out of occupations involving higher math and science s*ills. Dinorities also have less opportunity to do well in school. Dinorities are more li*ely to grow up in poverty and live in unhealthy environments. Dinorities are concentrated in the inner city where the worst, most impoverished schools are located. $herefore, even they wish to attend school, they still have less access to good teachers and a good learning environment. And perhaps the most detrimental issue that minorities face is that they are often stigmatized as inferior. $his causes them to be treated differently and it causes them to have low expectations fpr themselves, which leads to poor performance. .ducation is a vital part of society. !t serves the beneficial purpose of educating the children and getting them ready to be productive adults in today+s society. 5ut the social institution of education is not without its problems. #ontinual efforts to modify and improve the >A system need to be made to reap the highest benefits that education has to offer to children and the society as a whole. E. +arria#e a! Fa*i&' $o provide a safe lifestyle and environment for the perpetuation of the human race, the institution of marriage was created by various societies based upon an agreement by a man and a woman to become husband and wife. (ithin this sytem of dealing with responsibilities and safeguards of property rights and family lines, the family unit of husband, wife and children born to them, establish, preserve and maintain morals. $hey also cultivate, improve and perpetuate our civilization, legal, social and ethical codes and maintain the concept that marriage is a powerful commitment between a man and a woman to become husband and wife. $hat commitment has peripheral legal and personal responsibility factors. (hile the actual dynamics of marriage fnctions have changed throughout the centuries, as have perceived public needs, opinions and practices, the concept of a man and a woman as husband and wife bonding together in love, forming a family unit, with the potential of having children born of the marriage, has not changed. >> CHAPTER - +ARRIA:E< FA+IL4 PLANNIN: AND RESPONSI"LE PARENTHOOD A. +arria#e #umans emerge from the comple process of cells deciding to $oin and become tissues% Darriage is the process by which two people who love each other ma*e their relationship public, official, and permanent. !t is the joining of two people in a bond that putatively lasts until death, but in practice is increasingly cut short by divorce. 1f coures, over the course of a relationship that can last as many as seven or eight decades, a lot happens. -ersonalities change, bodies age, and romantic love waxes and wanes. And no marriage is free of conflict. (hat enables a couple to endure is how they handle that conflict. 6o how do you manage the problems that inevitably arise? And how can you *eep the spar* alive? >@ 0.a Nature $% +arria#e 0.b "ib&ica& -ie9 $ +arria#e Darriage was designedand created by ;od Darriage is solemnagreement between twopeople made in the presence of ;od Darriage is the only suitable relationship in which sex can happen Darriage is the ideal relationshipin which to bring up *iddies Darriage is intended to be permanent relationship #ouples are meant to be faithful within marriage 0.c Reas$s $% :etti# +arrie! 0ot everybody wants to get married. Dost liberal women prefer to saty single because they have the belief that having a permanent partner and children to rear is an en cumbrance. 1n the contrary, most people wat to get married due to any of the following reasons: >7 I% '$u &$ve s$*e$e< '$u s($u&! *arr' t(e* 2 $he thin*ing behind this statement is that when you declare your love for someone, your saying it is going to stay forever, so marriage should naturally follow since it cannot hinder this thin*ing but only solidify it. Marriage shows the other person how much you love them - $his is saying that in order to prove to your loved one that you indeed love them you need to ma*e a commitment to them and get married. It ensures that you will stay with each other for as long as you live - 6ince marriage is a promise to stay with someone for the rest of your life, whenever the thought of you being with someone else comes to your mind, you will remember that you are married, and only love one person with whom you shall share your entire life with. If you truly love someone, why would you not want to marry them? - (hen you say you love someone, nothing else should matter. (hy does this commitment scare you if you say you love them? Daybe you are afraid that this marriage will mean you will have to force yourself to be with this person even in the future when your feelings might change. 5ut if you say you love this person, how can your feelings in the future possibly change, therefore why are you afraid to get married? If the marriage doesn't work out, there is always divorce! - Assuming that later in life, you find out that your love was not true and it needs to end, you always have the divorce to fall bac* on. 0.! Ot(er reas$s %$r *arria#e $o beget children and have a happy family )or economic and social upliftment or insurance. 0.e F$r*s $% +arria#e As marriages cut off across different races and different cultures, marriage patterns emanate in accordance with established norms as well as laws. $he most commonly accepted forms of marriage are Donogamy and -olygamy. @< +$$#a*'. Donogamy is a &one9union' marriage wherein a man marries one woman. $his is the most accepted legal form of marriage among )ilipinos. As provided by -hilippine law, when a man marries more than one woman at a given time, he commits bi#a*' which is considered a crime. !n other countries where there are high rates of divorce and remarriage, monogamy as a form of marriage has been described by sociologists as serial monogamy. P$&'#a*'. !s a &many9union' marriage. A person marries two or more persons of the opposite sex at the same time. $his form of marriage is practiced among Duslims, especially those from the upper class, as they are permitted by their religion to have more than one wife at the same time as long as each one is financially supported. T')es $% P$&'#a*': P$&'#'' F is marriage uniting one man to two or several women. $his is practiced among !slamic nations. However, the number of polygynic marriages is declining because only a few can afford to simultaneously sustain several families. $hey usually belong to extremely wealthy families. P$&'a!r' F is marriage uniting one woman to many man. $his form of marriage is very rare. -olyandry has been practiced in $ibet where agriculture is difficult. -olyandry discourages the division of land into small parcels so people are unable to support a family. 0.% Se&ecti$ $% +arria#e Parters +ate se&ecti$ is the practice wherein a prospective groom or bride chooses future husband or wife. $his is a crucial stage in the selection process. $he *ind of person one chooses to marry determines the *ind and Guality of life the family one will have. 6election of future mates is often limited on the basis of group mores and patterns. )or instance, the presence of icest tab$$s is dominant among )ilipinos. $he systems of marriage such as endogamy and exogamy li*ewise limit the selection of mates. @, E!$#a*' reGuires a person to marry someone from his own locality, from his own race, social class and religion. EE$#a*' mandates marriage between people of different social categories. 0.%0 Prici)&es $% +ate Se&ecti$ Oaide (,77@) states that in the process of selecting mates, people are usually guided by certain principles, although they may not aware that they are using one. Prici)&es $% Ass$rtative +ati# refers to an individual who consciously or unconsciously selects a partner exhibiting characteristics more or less similar to his"her own. Prici)&e $% Pre%erecia& +ati# refers to the individual who selects a mate exhibiting certain characteristics which he"she considers desirable. Prici)&e $% Aut$*atic Fact$rs is subdivided into: Consciousness of kind refers to a person who marries somebody belonging to the same group. Residential propin&uity refers to an individual who marries somebody living nearby. 'ccupational propin&uity refers to a person who marries somebody wor*ing in the same place or who is engaged in the same or allied profession. Short time eposure refers to a person who marries somebody whom he"she has *nown for a short time and in a company he"she has been thrown constantly. Darriage partner selection should be done thoroughly and unhurriedly and several factors on mate selection be considered. $oo often, after a &romantic' marriage, when reality finally sets in, couples fall out of love and statrt Guarelling until it leads to their separation. 0.%1 C$urts(i) @B #ourtship paves the way for a man and a woman to *now each other better from the moral, social, spiritual and emotional points of view. !t should be analyzed not only on the basis of love and affection but also on r$&e eE)ectati$s< c$**it*et and c$*)etitiveess. F$ur Sta#es $% C$urts(i) 0 st Dati# usually refers to an arrangement or appointment between a aman and a woman to meet socially. !t is a social engagement, usually with the opposite sex. !t fulfills a number of important functions in the lives of the youth. Premarital Se is sex outside marriage which diminishes the symbolic meaning of couple+s+ c$**it*et for life. $he following are the reasons why premarital sex is strongly discouraged: A "i!i# F$rce. 6ex befor marriage can become a binding force leading to marriage based on sex and not on friendship and love. +e*$ries. )lashbac*s of previous sexual encounters can haunt a marriage and may inflict conflict in couples. +a@es it Di%%icu&t t$ Disti#uis( bet9ee Rea& L$ve a! I%atuati$. 5ecause sexual intercourse is designed to bring people together as one. (hen sex is experienced outside of marriage, it can confuse a person+s feelings and decision9 ma*ing ability. -remarital sex ma*es couple believe that it is enhancing oneness and is safe to go ahead and not get married. 5ut the fact is, premarital sex only promotes body unity and mind and soul unity that is necessary for a lifetime commitment (emotional pleasure). :ui&t. ;uilt of having sex with a persons not your husband"wife can be carried over to sex in marriage. Pre*arita& Pre#ac'. -remarital pregnancy most often leads to abortion and singl parenthood for unwed mothers and fathers. @4 AIDS a! $t(er !iseases. 6exually transmitted disease (6$2s) such as gonorrhea, syphilis, herpes and AcGuired !mmunodeficiency 6yndrome (A!26) can add emotional grief to persons inflicted with these diseases. Wea@ess +arria#e. Dost often, marriage with couples who have engaged in premarital sex end in divorce or separation. 1 ! :$i# Stea!' happens when a person decides to date another person exclusively and seems to be a prelude to a private understanding between two people. 2uring this period, a young couple tries to explore and test the personality of another, identify his"her main characteristics, discover his"her temperaments and find out each other+s common ideas and values. #ompatibility is a factor in a lasting relationship. 3 r! +utua& U!ersta!i#. Among )ilipinos, mutual understanding is thye stage when a man, after years of courtship and has *nown a woman very well, now proposes marriage to the woman. His intentions may be seen in his open declaration of love and affection to the woman and his obvious determination to have her as his wife. A t( E#a#e*et practice is still predominant among many )ilipinos. .nagagement has been associated with either giving an enagaement ring or giving a !$9r', assumed as a bride price. "ri!e )rice may roughly be defined as a marriage payment made by a prospective husband or by his family to the family of the bride. According to 5eals, bride price and dowry are synonymous. He stated many functions of dowry. !t symbolizes the socioeconomic statuses of the families to be united. !t establishes an economic tie between the families of the bride and the groom to further ensure the stability of the marriage. !t provides the family of the bride with a means of replacing her with a daughter9in9 law. 0.# Re=uisites %$r +arria#e @F Essetia& re=uire*ets as provided in Article B of the )amily #ode of the -hilippines states that no marriage shall be valid unless the following essential reGuisites are present: 0. %egal capacity of the contracting parties who must be a male and a female and 1. #onsent freely given in ythe presence of the the solemnizing officer. F$r*a& re=uisites of marriage as stated in Article 4 are as follows: 0. Authority of the solemnizing officer 1. Calid marriage license 3. Darriage ceremonywhich ta*es place with the appearance of the contracting parties before the solemnizing officer and their personal declaration that they ta*e each other as husband and wife in the presence of not less than two witnesses of legal age. Ot(er re=uisites %$r +arria#e: 0. Age must be eighteen years or onwards for any male or female not under any impediments 1. -ersonal appearance of the contracting parties and their declaration witnessed by not less than two witnesses of legal age. 2eclaration shall be contained in the marriage certificate which shall be signed by the by the contracting parties and their witnesses and ettested by the solemnizing officer 3. (here marriage license is reGuired, each of the contracting parties file separately sworn applications for such license with the proper local civil registrar which specify: a. full name of the contracting party b. place of birth c. age and date of birth !. civil status e. if previously married, when and where previous marriage was dissolved or annulled %. present residence and citizenship #. degree of relationship of the contracting parties (. full name, residence and citizenship of the father @= i. full name, residence and citizenship of the mother and j. full name, residence and citizenship of the guardian or person having charge, in case the contracting party has neither father nor mother and is a minor or under the age of twenty9one years. 0.( S$&e*i/i# +arria#e )rom the same code under Article >: 0. Any incumbent member of the judiciary within the court+s jurisdiction 1. Any priest, rabbi, imam or minister of any church or religious sect duly authorized by his church or religious sect and registered with the civil registrar general, acting within the limits of the written authority granted him by his church or religious sect and provided that at least one of the contracting parties belongs to the solemnizing officer+s church or religious sect 3. Any ship captain or airplane pilot only in the cases of articulo mortisb between passenge4ers and crew members not only while the ship is at sea or the plane in flight, but also during stop overs at ports of call A. Any military commander of a unit to which a chaplain is assigned, in the absence of the latter, during a military operation, li*ewise only in cases where a military commander of a unit who is a commissioned officer, shall li*ewise have authority to solemnize marriage in articulo mortis between persons within the zone of military operation, whether members of the armed forces or civilians and B. Any consul9general, consul or vice9consul in tha case provided in Article ,< (marriages between )ilipino citizens abroad). 0.(0 -$i! a! -$i!ab&e +arria#es -$i! *arria#e is an invalid marriage. -$i!ab&e *arria#e is a marriage which can be made invalid or annulled. Darriages which shall be void from the beginning (article 4= of the )amily #ode of the -hilippines): @A 0. $hose contracted by any party below eighteen years of age even with parents+ or guardians+ consent 1. $hose solemnized by any person not legally authorized to perform marriages unless such marriages were contracted with either or both parties believing in good faith that the solemnizing officer had the legal authority to do so 3. $hose solemnized without a license, except those covered by exmptions A. $hose bigamous or polygamous marriages under Article F, of this code B. $hose contracted through mista*e of onecontracting party as to the identity of the other and C. $hose subseGuent marriages that are void under Article =4 of this code. Also considered void marriages: 0. Darriges contracted by any party who, at the time of the celebration, was psychologically incapacitated to comply with the essential obligations of marriage, even if such incapacity manifests only after its solemnization and 1. Darriages between ascendants and descendants of any degree and between brothers and sisters, whether full or half9blood. 2ue to reasons of public policy, the following marriages shall be void from the beginning s stated in Article 4@: 0. 5etween collateral blood relations, whether legitimate or illegitimate, up to the fourth civil degree 1. 5etween stepparents and stepchildren 3. 5etween parents9in9law and children9in9law A. 5etween the adopting parent and the adopted child B. 5etween the surviving spouse of the adopting parent and the adopted child C. 5etween the surviving spouse of the adopted child and the adopter G. 5etween an adopted child and a legitimate child of the adopter H. 5etween adopted children of the same adopter and @> J. 5etween parties where one, with the intention to marry the other, *illed that other person+s spouse or his"her own spouse. $he same section under Article F= of the same code states that a marriage may be au&&e! for any of the following causes existing at the time of the marriage: 0. $hat the party in whose behalf it is sought to have tha marriage annulled was eighteen years of age or over but below twenty9one, and the marriage was solemnized without the consent of the parents, guardians or persons having substitute parental authority over the party, in that order, unless after attaining the age of twenty9one, such party freely cohabited with the other and both lived together as husband and wife 1. $hat either party wa of unsound mind, unless such party, after coming to reason, freely cohabited with the other as husband and wife 3. $hat the consent of either party was obtained by fraud, unless such party afterwards, with full *nowledge of facts constituting the fraud, freely cohabited with the other as husband and wife A. $hat the consent of either party was obtained by force, or intimidation or undue influence unless the same havig disappeared or ceased, such party thereafter freely cohabited with the other as husband and wife B. $hat either party was physically incapable of consummating the marriage with the other, and such incapacity continues and appears to be incurable or C. $hat either party was afflicted with a sexually transmittable disease found to be serious and appears to be incurable. )raud referd to in 0o. 4 refers to any of the following circumstances as stated in Article FA: a. 0ondisclosure of a previous conviction by final judgment of the other party to a crime involving moral turpitude b. #oncealment by the wife of the fact that at the time of the marriage, she was pregnant by a man other than her husband. @@ c. #oncealment of a sexually9transmittable disease, regardless of its nature, existing at the time of the marriage or !. #oncealment of drug addiction, habitual alcoholism, homosexuality or lesbianism, existing at the time pof the marriage. ". Re)r$!uctive Hea&t( (ithin the framewor* of the (orld Health 1rganizationEs ((H1) definition of health as a state of complete physical, mental and social well9being, and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity, re)r$!uctive (ea&t(, or seEua& (ea&t("('#iee, addresses the reproductive processes, functions and system at all stages of life. /eproductive health, therefore, implies that people are able to have a responsible, satisfying and safer sex life and that they have the capability to reproduce and the freedom to decide if, when and how often to do so. !mplicit in this are the right of men and women to be informed of and to have access to safe, effective, affordable and acceptable methods of birth control of their choice and the right of access to appropriate health care services of sexual andreproductive medicine that will enable women to go safely through pregnancy and childbirth and provide couples with the best chance of having a healthy infant. According to the (H1, Hreproductive and sexual ill9health accounts for B<P of the global burden of ill9health for women and ,FP for men.H An unofficial wor*ing definition for sexual health is that H6exual health is a state of physical, emotional, mental and social well9being in relation to sexuality it is not merely the absence of disease, dysfunction or infirmity. 6exual health reGuires a positive and respectful approach to sexuality and sexual relationships, as well as the possibility of having pleasurable and safe sexual experiences, free of coercion, discrimination and violence. )or sexual health to be attained and maintained, the sexual rights of all persons must be respected, protected and fulfilled.H However, this is not an official (H1 position, and should not be used or Guoted as a (H1 definition. Ear&' c(i&!beari# and other behaviours can have health ris*s for women and their infants. (aiting until a woman is at least ,@ years old before trying to have children improves @7 maternal and child health. !f an additional child is desired, it is considered healthier for mother, as well as for the succeeding child, to wait at least B years after previous birth before attempting to conceive. After a miscarriage or abortion, it is healthier to wait at least A months. $he (H1 estimates that each year, 4=@ <<< women die due to complications related to pregnancy and childbirth 77P of these deaths occur within the most disadvantaged population groups living in the poorest countries of the world. Dost of these deaths can be avoided with improving womenEs access to Guality care from a s*illed birth attendant before, during and after pregnancy and childbirth. C. Fa*i&' P&ai# 0. T(e Fa*i&' !t is generally accepted that the family is the %irst a! $&!est s$cia& istituti$ i s$ciet'. !t consists of parents and children who interact with one another. $hrough this socialization process, parents are able to hand down socially acceptable cultural practices that serve as initial training for the young to become future responsible citizens in the future. According to Oaide (,77@), the family refers to a group of people united by ties of marriage, blood or adoption. )amily is a universal institution that has common characteristics. 0. )amily members associate with one another in their respective roles as husband and wife, mother and father, son and daughter or brother and sister. 1. As the members of the family enjoy life together playing their different roles, they tend to create a common subculture where a member is made to feel aware of his role through a long period of socialization during childhood. 7< 0.a Fa*i&' Structures $he nature of each family structure and the interactions therein has been observed to influence the personality development of its members. )amily structures are based on internal organization, descent, residence and authority. "ase! $ Itera& Or#ai/ati$ 0. C$ju#a& %a*i&' is composed of only the husband and the wife as in a newly9wed couple. 1. Nuc&ear %a*i&' is often reffered to as either a primary or an elementary family. !t is composed of the married couple and their children. 3. EEte!e! %a*i&' is composed of two or more nuclear families or several generations of families together under one roof. "ase! $ Descet )amilies tend to trace their ancestry from either the paternal or maternal side. 0. Patri&iea& %a*i&' traces the family members+ relationships and affiliates with relatives on the father+s side. 1. +atri&iea& %a*i&' traces the family members+ relationships and affiliates with relatives on the mother+s side. 3. "i&atera& %a*i&' traces the family members+ relationships and affiliates with relatives on both parents. "ase! $ Resi!ece 0. Patri&$ca& resi!ece wherein the newly9married couple lives with or near the domicile of the bridegroom+s parents. 1. +atri&$ca& resi!ece wherein the newly9married couple lives with or near the domicile of the bride+s parents. 7, 3. "i&$ca& resi!ece wherein the couple chooses to stay with either the groom+s or the bride+s parents, depending on factors li*e the relative wealth of the families or their status, the wishes of the parents or certain personal preferences of the bride and the groom. A. Ne$&$ca& resi!ece wherein the couple resides independently from the parents of either groom or bride. B. Avucu&$ca& resi!ece wherein newly9married couple is prescribed to reside with or near the maternal uncle of the groom. "ase! $ Aut($rit' 0. Patriarc(a& %a*i&' is a type of family where authority is vested in the oldest male in the family, often the father. $he sons, especially the eldest, also enjoy special prestige and priveleges. $he males spea* for the familial group with regard to property relations, legal obligations and criminal offenses. $his type is characterized by family solidarity and ancestor worship. 1. +atriarc(a& %a*i&' is a type where the authority is vested in the mother or the mother+s *in. $his type is very rare and can be found in societies where the mother dominates the household. 3. E#a&itaria %a*i&' is a type where the husband and the wife exercise a more or less eGual amount of authority. A. +tricetric %a*i&' which is a recently emerged type found in the suburbs of the 3nited 6tates where the prolonged absence of the father gives the mother a dominant position in the family, although the father may also share with the mother in decision9 ma*ing. 0.b Fucti$s $% t(e Fa*i&' (ith the passage of time family+s vital tas*s as a basic social institution were either wea*end or strengthened due to social and cultural changes. S$cia&i/ati$ $% c(i&!re. -arents act as a basic socialization agents for their children. $hey transmit to their children standards of behavior, value systems, basic s*ills, 7B motivations and wor* attitudes. $hese are integrated in their personalities, which they use to further socialize as they go beyond their family, peer group, school and wor* group. Re#u&at$r $% seEua& be(avi$r a! activit'. 3niversally, incest taboo is a regulation. !t forbids marriage between closest *ins. $his norm minimizes sexual competition within families by restricting legitimate sexuality to spouses. !t also forces people to marry outside of their immediate families. /eproduction between close relatives can mentally and physically impair offsprings. $he close reproduction among close relatives would also confuse *inship ties and threaten social order. S$cia& )&ace*et. /eproduction of children maintains social organization. 5irth is preferred to married parents where they can confer their own social identity in terms of race, religion or social class. +ateria& a! e*$ti$a& securit'. $o a greater extent, most families loo* to *in for physical protection, emotional support and financial assistance. !t is no surprise that people living in families tend to be healthier than those living alone. 0.c Hea&t(' Fa*i&' Healthy home is a place where every member is ta*en seriously as a person and where he"she *nows he"she is values, respected and loved. Happiness always resides in a healthy family. Hea&t(' %a*i&' *aitais a s)iritua& %$u!ati$. A shared religious core supported by a church affiliation gives stability to the individual and his family. Hea&t(' %a*i&' *a@es t(e %a*i&' a t$) )ri$rit'. Dother $heresa observed that &the world today is upside down, and is suffering so much because there is very little love in the homes and in the family. (e have no time for our children, we have no time for each other, there is no time to enjoy each other.' do not allow wor* or other activities infringe family life. Da*e time to be together. Hea&t(' %a*i&ies as@ a! #ive res)ects. /espect is a two9way street. !n order to receive respect, you must first give it. 74 Hea&t(' %a*i&ies c$**uicate a! &iste. Here are five Gualities common to active listeners from Dary 2ur*in: a. ;iving the other person opportunity to express ideas and feelings without interrupting, b. Da*ing an honest attempt to understand those ideas and feelings, c. 6etting aside preconceived opinions about the other person, !. 6howing respect for the other person+s right to hold a view different from yours, and e. 2emonstrating your appreciation of the effort the other person is ma*ing. Hea&t(' %a*i&ies va&ue service t$ $t(ers. )ocus on raising children who care about others and who wor* to improve conditions for the less fortunate. Hea&t(' %a*i&ies eE)ect a! $%%er acce)tace. ;ood family provides a psychological safety net that ma*es members feel accepted. 1. Fa*i&' P&ai# +et($!s )amily planning, which is understood as the regulation of fertility so as to have limited number of children, is one important component of population education. $o attain this, one must understand the advantages and disadvantages of each method of family planning and choose which suits them best. 1.a C&assi%icati$ $% Fa*i&' P&ai# +et($!s F$&@ +et($!s a. P$stc$ita& !$uc(i# is done by flushing the vagina with medicated solution immediately after intercourse to remove or *ill the sperm. $his, however, is relatively ineffective as the sperm cells may have entered the cervical canal and are unaffected. )reGuent douching may also damage the vaginal lining. b. Pr$&$#e! &actati$, an ancient practice of preventing preganacy, is prolonged breastfeeding which delays ovulation. $his practice is safe and free but it may not be 7F effective to those whose ovulation period returns from two to four months after a baby+s delivery. "e(avi$ra& +et($!s a. Natura& *et($! $r r('t(* *et($! does not reGuire the use of any drug, chemical or plastic sheaths. !t is called the rhythm method because its success depends upon the woman+s monthly menstrual cycle. $he husband simply refrains from having sexual intercourse with his wife during the latter+s fertile period. b. Ovu&ati$ *et($! is done by determining the woman+s period through the use of the calendar, thermometer or appearance of cervical mucus or vaginal discharge in the vaginal canal. (omen with normal regular cycles+s body temperature usually drops sharply a day or two before ovulation and rises sharply after ovulation has occurred. $he presence of mucus or vaginal discharge in the vaginal canal which usually occurs three days after menstruation is a sure indication that ovulation is soon to occur. 2uring the &pea* symptom,' when women+s discharge turns clearer and more slippery, sexual union should be avoided. c. Wit(!ra9a& *et($! is *nown as coitus interruptus because the act of sexual intercourse is interrupted by the withdrawal of the male organ prior to its ejaculation. $his calls for maximum self9control and precise timing on the part of the male. However, this method could be unreliable due to the emission of pre9ejaculatory fluid, which may contain enough sperm cells that may cause pregnancy, over which the husband has no control. 2eprivation of considerable physical satisfaction for both husband and wife may also occur which may later have psychological effects. +ec(aica& C$trace)tives a. T(e c$!$* is a thin sheath of elastic rubber worn by the male over the penis during sexual intercourse. $he sheath prevents the male sperm from entering the female uterus, thus preventing the possibility of conception. $his method is cheap because condoms are sold cheaply and are readily available. 1ne of the advantages of using 7= condoms is that the ris* of contracting sexually transmitted diseases such as A!26, syphilis, gonorrhea and the li*es is minimized. b. T(e !ia)(ra#* is a shallow rubber cap with a flexible spring that is compressed and inserted into the vagina so that it fits snugly over the cervix. !t is usually covered with spermicidal jelly or cream to prevent the entry of sperms into the uterus. A doctor has to chec* it annually to see that it stays in place. 6ometimes, diaphragms are dislodged during sexual union. c. T(e cervica& ca) is made of rubber with a tapering dome appearance designed to fit snuggly over the cervix. (hen fitted by a doctor, it stays in place during sexual intercourse and over longer periods. C(e*ica& C$trace)tives a. -a#ia& su))$sit$r' is a samall bullet9shaped substance containing chemical capable of *illing sperms. !t is inserted in the vagina ,<9,= minutes prior to intercourse. %i*ewise, the va#ia& %$a*i# tab&et is moistened with water or saliva then inserted into the vagina ,<9,= minutes before intercourse. !t melts inside the vagina and forms a coat of foam to prevent the sperms from entering the uterus. b. .e&&ies a! crea*s a! va#ia& %$a*s are often pac*aged in bottles and sold with plastic applicators. $hey are inserted into the vagina just before sexual intercourse. $he purpose is to immobilize or *ill the sperms. $he spermicides, however, only last for at least an hour. $here should be no douching or washing of the vagina for six hours after intercourse for effective usage. Itrauterie Device 7IUD8 resembles a coil made of plastic or metal and is inserted properly into the uterus through the cervical canal by a doctor. However, many women refrain from using !32 as it usually causes bleeding. 6ometimes, it is expelled through minimum pushing during sexual intercourse. !ts latest form is the #opper $4@<A which prevents fertilization primarily by creating an intrauterine environment that is spermicidal. A foreign body reaction of the endometrium J a sterile inflammation J prevents viable sperm from reaching the fallopian tube. #opper is said to exert its action 7A locally on the endometrium, heightening the inflammatory response it increases the local protogland in production and inhibits endometrial enzymes. Ora& c$trace)tive5)i&& is ta*en through the mouth. !t is made up of synthetic hormones that prevent conception by inhibiting the ovaries from releasing egg cells. !t has to be ta*en regularly for B, dys based on the woman+s menstrual cycle. $he first pill is ta*en on the fifth day of menstruation and continued for B<9B, days each month. (hen it is stopped, menstruation occurs. $he pill, however, is *nown to have caused some side effects, the most serious of which is blood clotting especially among women over forty years of age. T(e ijectib&es is one of the latest methods of family planning which uses injectible contraceptive drug *nown as De)Pr$vera 7D+PA8. $he woman is injected with this drug at the hip muscle instead of ta*ing pills. $he effectivity of one injection lasts for three months. 6ome side effects, however, derived from using it were reported to include headaches, bloating of the abdomen or breasts and mood changes. Sur#ica& *et($!s $% steri&i/ati$ a. Tuba& &i#ati$ %$r 9$*e refers to the act of tying or cutting the fallopian tubes to ma*e a woman sterile. (hen the fallopian tubes are severed or tied, no egg cell could pass from the ovary to the uterus. $hus, when the egg is prevented from meeting the sperm, no pregnancy occurs. !t is ,<<P effective. 6o, before the mother subjects herself for ligation, she must be very sure that she does not want to conceive anymore. b. -asect$*' %$r *e is a minor and cheap operation done wihtin ,=9B< minute wherein the male vas deferens, a tube9li*e passage that stems from each testis that produces the sperms is cut or tied. $he sperms pass through the vas deferens to the seminal vesicle where they mix with the semen before they are discharged from the male organ into the female genital tract during sexual intercourse. 1nce the vas deferens is cut or tied, the sperm cells cannot mix with the semen thus preventing pregnancy on a woman. $he male body will still continue to produce sperm cells but these are absorbed by the body. $his is medically *nown as )(a#$c't$sis. 7> Ab$rti$ is the interruption of pregnancy before the fetus is mature enough to survive outside the womb. !t deprives the unborn child of its right to life and places the women+s life in danger. D. Res)$sib&e Paret($$! ,. Ri#(ts a! Ob&i#ati$s $% Husba! a! Wi%e Inowledge of their rights andobligations as husband and wife can be a start of a healthy and vigorous married life and a happy family. 0. $he husband and wife are obliged to live together, observe mutual love, respect and fidelity, and render mutual help and support. 1. $hey shall fix the family domicile. !n case of disagreement, the court shall decide. 3. 6pouses are jointly responsible for the support of the family. A. Danagement of the household shall be the right and duty of both spouses. B. $he aggrieved party may apply to the court for relief if the other spouse neglects his"her duties or commit acts, which tend to bring danger, dishonor or injury to the other member of the family. C. .ither spouse may exercise any legitimate profession, occupation, business or activity. -arenting has its rewards and pleasures, hardships and inconveniences. $he parent+s life as a couple changes with the presence of children. Hence, couples should give considerable thought to the duties and responsibilities involved in parenthood and learn to accept, love the experience as parents and strive to be the best possible parents by fulfilling their parental roles of meeting the needs of the children and sharing of responsibilities. 1. +eeti# C(i&!re;s Nee!s Deeting the children+s needs is the simple role of parents. #hldren+s primary needs are physical, emotional, social and intellectual which parents+ responsibility to share with. 7@ P('sica& ee!s. $he tendency to grow is natural hence, the parental tas* is to discover the physical needs of their children and to provide for these needs in order to hasten their development. E*$ti$a& ee!s. #hildren need love, affection, understanding, approval and security. (hen parents give these emotional needs, children develop positive feelings and become emotionally secure and stable. (hen these emotional needs are denied or thwarted, children become hostile, fearful, anxious, secure, and develop a feeling of resentment toward toward their parents. S$cia& ee!s. ;regariousness is an inborn tendency. As children grow, they want to be with others. $hey want to be accepted by the group but do not *now how to relate. $he tas* of parents is to provide their children with the opportunities necessary for socialization. 5eing a part of society means that one should learn and belong to the group by *nowing their customs, mores, habits and manners. Ite&&ectua& ee!s. !ntelligence is biological eGuipment. #hidren+s potential for intellectual growth is inherent. $hey are naturally curious and desire to delve in several new experiences. $he parental role in fulfilling this need is for them to provide the necessary stimulation and variety of learning experiences necessary for cognitive, affective and psychomotor development. +$ra& ee!s. #hildren have the capacity for moral growth. $hey rely on people they trust. -arents should ta*e this opportunity to teach their children values so they could distinguish right from wrong. $heir abilities have to be developed through moral reasoning and imitating the good examples set by elders. 3. S(ari# res)$sibi&ities. #hildren+s physical, intellectual, emotional, social and moral needs cannot be met by only one parent. 5oth father and mother should ta*e care and rear their children properly. $he mother should not be expected to ta*e care and rear the children all by herself because this would be unfair to her and her children. .very parent has strengths and wea*nesses. Dost fathers can contribute something positive to a child+s life. $he best fathers are almost indispensable. Andalthough most fathers thin* that it is the mothers+ job to ta*e care for the babies, fathers also 77 benefit from caring for their children for this could develop a father9child closeness that enriches family ties. A marriage without some basic structural underta*ings about each person+s expected contributions and involvement in the joint venture is analogous to trying to build a house without any plans involving both the owners and the builders. Attempting to build a home based on male9 centered parental and marital roles is a certain blueprint for disaster. An unstructured home is unsatisfactory especially in a stormy weather. $he ideal is authenticity and fulfillment, which comes from submerging each family member into a large group releasing one+s natural impulses li*e honest emotions, cultivating subjectivity and developing a radical openness to existence by refusing to impose order on anyone. 5eing a parent is more than playing a role. !t is more than a lifestyle J it is an ethical vocation. $he undeniable burdens of family responsibility must be more openheartedly borne. !f a )ilipino home is a locus of private life, it is alos critical to public life, to the life of the community and to civic associations. ,<<