Abstract:
Culture as the philosophy of life refers to the values, norms and rules, and actual behaviorwhich is taken over by man from the past generations, and to leave it to next generation in a differentform, separates individuals belonging to the culture from individuals belonging to other cultures.Each of these different attitudes describes the degree to which the culture values the past, the present,or the future. Cultures place emphasis on the events that have happened or will happen during theperiod that they view as important. In order to be able to describe and understand each of the involvedcultures in a specific intercultural situation, three dimensions of culture are worked with: 'thehorizontal cultural dimension'; 'the vertical cultural dimension' and 'the cultural dimension of time.
Machine summary:
The Culture, Intercultural and Cross-cultural Dimensions in Communication Mohammad Motiee1 Assistant Professor of English Literature, Islamic Azad University, Central Tehran Branch and Young Researchers and Elite Club Received 9 May 2015 Revised 23 July 2015 Accepted 4 September 2015 Culture as the philosophy of life refers to the values, norms and rules, and actual behavior which is taken over by man from the past generations, and to leave it to next generation in a different form, separates individuals belonging to the culture from individuals belonging to other cultures.
by education 3: expert care and training 4 a: enlightenment and excellence of taste acquired by intellectual and aesthetic training b: acquaintance with and taste in fine arts, humanities and broad aspects of science as distinguished from vocational and technical skills 5 a: the integrated pattern of human knowledge, belief, and behavior that depends upon man’s capacity for learning and transmitting knowledge to succeeding generations b: the customary beliefs, social forms and material traits of a racial, religious, or social group 6: cultivation of living material in prepared nutrient media; also: a product of such cultivation Culture, of course, is a very broad term, used in various ways, so often that it has comes to mean anything and everything to some people.
" Culture is the philosophy of life, the values, norms and rules, and actual behavior - as well as the material and immaterial products from these - which are taken over by man from the past generations, and which man wants to bring forward to the next generation - eventually in a different form - and which in one way or another separate individuals belonging to the culture from individuals belonging to other cultures.