Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 March 2020
As observed in Chapter 1, the definition of culture is complicated, calling to mind Justice Potter Stewart’s admonition that he could never quite define pornography but “I know it when I see it.” For convenience, we may divide culture into its attitudinal aspects – the knowledge, belief, and behavior part of the definition in Chapter 1 – and its institutional component, which concerns the values and practices that characterize a particular institution or organization. Of course, these two aspects overlap in practice since institutional structures are founded on knowledge while beliefs are determined to a large degree by the institutional structures in which they arise; yet the distinction remains useful.
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