The term multiculturalism coins a variety of customs and traditions that have evolved and the existence that brings them together in modern society, but what if some cultures are more advanced than others? This book emphasizes the value of the Jewish, Confucian and Protestant cultures more than any other. However, the author argues that not all cultures are considered equivalent, but are respected as if they were. But through it all, the author spent a lot of time learning about different cultures through travel and research to gauge his perspective. He believes that cultural differences are important and often undermined. The author uses different elements of social sciences (psychology, economics, for example) to describe what idolizes differences in our society. Economically, most of our decisions and policies come from accommodating different cultures. The United States, for example, is known to strive to protect our nation from intra-country disputes based on barriers and differences. Our well-known border control forIn conclusion, no culture is better or worse than another. This principle is a good incentive for many cultural anthropologists who carry out ethnographic fieldwork. The goal of multiculturalism is to truly understand the differences of others, however unfortunately ethnocentrism takes part in that study which deals with those who distort the reality of a multicultural society and choose to judge others based on their own beliefs. Challenging the belief that some cultures might be better suited to facilitating progress, democracy, social justice and poverty prevention, which ultimately defines the goals of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, cultural relativism begins to look more like a disorder than a previous problem.
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