NCE4L44 Of Patterns of culture新概念4-44文化的模式
The inner working of our own brains we feel to be uniquely worthy of investigation,
but custom, we have a way of thinking, is behaviour at its most commonplace.
As a matter of fact, it is the other way around. Traditional custom,
taken the world over, is a mess of detailed behaviour more astonishing than
what any one person can ever evolve in individual actions,
no matter how aberrant. Yet that is a rather trivial aspect of the matter.
The fact of first-rate importance is the predominant role
that custom plays in experience and in belief,
and the very great varieties it may manifest.
No man ever looks at the world with pritine eyes.
He sees it edited by a definite site of customs and institutions and ways of thinking.
Even in his philosophical probings he cannot go behind these stereotypes:
his very concepts of the true
and the false will still have reference to his particular traditional customs.
John Dewey has said all seriousness that the part played
by custom in shaping the behaviour of the individual,
as against any way in which he can affect traditional custom,
is as the proportion of the total vocabulary of his mother tongue against those words of
his own baby talk that are taken up into the vernacular of his family.
When one seriously studies the social orders
that have had the opportunity to develop autonomously,
the figure becomes no more than an exact and matter-of-fact observation.
The life history of the individual is first and foremost an accomodation
to the patterns and standards traditionally handed down in his community.
From the moment of his birth,
the customs into which he is born shape his experience and behaviour.
By the time he can talk, he is the little creature of his culture,
and by the time he is grown and able to take part in its activities,
its habits are his habits,
its beliefs his beliefs, its impossibilities his impossibilities.
Every child that is born into his group will share them with him, and no child
born into one on the opposite side of the globe can ever achieve the thousandth part.
There is no social problem it is more incumbent upon us
to understand than this of the role custom.
Until we are intelligent as to its laws and varieties,
the main complicating facts of human life must remain unintelligible.
The study of custom can be profitable only after
certain preliminary propositions have been accepted,
and some of these propositions have been violently opposed. In the first place,
any scientific study requires that there be no preferential weighting of one or
another of the items in the series it selects for its consideration.
In all the less controversial fields,
like the study of cacti or termites or the nature of nebulae,
the necessary method of study is to group the relevant material
and to take note of all possible variant forms and conditions.
In this way, we have learned all that we know of the laws of astronomy,
or of the habits of the social insects, let us say.
It is only in the study of man himself
that the major social sciences have substituted the study of one local variation,
that of Western civilization.
Anthropology was by definition impossible,
as long as these distinctions between ourselves and the primitive,
ourselves and the barbarian, ourselves and the pagan,
held sway over people's minds.
It was necessary first to arrive to that degree of sophistication
where no longer set our own belief against our neighbour's superstition.
It was necessary to recognize that these institutions
which are based on the same premises, let us say the supernatural,
must be considered together, our own among the rest.
RUTH BENEDICT Patterns of Culture