Across
- 3. reductionism The belief that all phenomena can be broken down and investigated at the level of fundamental entities and forces
- 4. Community that has a resolve to maintain the traditions and culture of that community in the face of a dominant society which would otherwise easily subsume the community
- 6. The belief that unseen spirits exist in objects, places and creatures in the environment and often form part of the explanation of natural forces
- 7. Actions which are abstract and divorced from everyday activity
- 11. The core beliefs in a religion which all individuals are expected to hold
- 13. A strong feeling of support or allegiance
- 15. Moral principles that govern a person's behaviour or the conducting of an activity
- 16. Actions that are happen again and again, the same way each time without alteration
- 17. The quality or state of being dual or of having a dual nature
- 19. The narration that establish the relationship with that world by creating a framework in which people can see themselves in that natural world
- 21. An acceptance that something exists or is true, especially one without proof
- 22. rules or established natural principles which govern how knowledge ought to be constructed
Down
- 1. A branch of anthropology focusing on the different characteristics between human populations and cultures and the historical relationships between these
- 2. a method of reasoning by which concrete applications or consequences are deducted from general principles, from general to particular
- 5. The performance of more or less invariant sequences of formal acts and utterances not encoded by the performers
- 8. The belief that we are all related to one another and that we are deeply related to the natural world around us
- 9. The study of human cultures
- 10. A person or thing to which a specified action or feeling is directed
- 12. The emphasis on the labour of individuals
- 14. The belief that the particular must be understood in terms of the whole
- 18. The ideas, customs, and social behaviour of a particular people or society
- 20. A historical period that can be characterized by significant shifts in the role of individual reason and inquiry in the formation of knowledge, and the breakdown of authority
