Cultural anthropology
Cultural anthropology is one of the four or five branches of anthropology (the study of the whole picture of mankind). This branch of science regards culture as a meaningful scientific concept. Cultural anthropologists explore human cultural variability and collect the results of observations, often through participatory observation called fieldwork and examining the impact of global economic and political processes on local culture. The first clear explanation of the term "culture" from anthropology is from Edward Burnett Taylor, who published in the first page of the "primitive culture" published in 1897: "Culture or civilization, taking the generalized ethnographic meaning of this vocabulary It is a complex whole that is learned as a member of society, including knowledge, faith, art, morality, law, custom, and other abilities and habits. Later, the definition of the term civilization is replaced by the definition proposed by V. Gordon Childe, which is a general term that refers to a particular kind of culture. ...