NSTP2 Activity 4 PDF
NSTP2 Activity 4 PDF
NSTP2 Activity 4 PDF
NSTP II
Activity 4
1. The aesthetic and moral values of a community consist of the guiding and sometimes
paradoxical ideas that its members hold, e.g., how they know what is good from bad,
beautiful from ugly, and right from wrong, as well as the justifications necessary in
explaining their actions. What other aesthetic values can you think of?
Every society's cornerstone is family, and it acts as the lowest unit of government.
given the fact that the family was also the community, and the family was the unit of a
society. In early basic cultures, society was the family. All responsibilities and status
were established by the family. A family is made up of direct and indirect relatives, but a
community is made up of strangers consists of numerous families who share common
interests and live in the same area. Sharing utilizing communal resources, pursuing the
common good, and promoting a peaceful environment. Relationships are an example of
a family activity that a community participates. In addition, as societies became more
complex, so did families, and as a result, new types of relationships emerged.
Relationships that were not familial arose and were acknowledged.
A. Instructions: Discuss the following topics substantially. Write your answers on the
space provided.
Human religion is typically associated with this biblical concept of a community. It's a
unique situation a general phrase for atheistic notions, such as when God created man
in his own image. It is made up of shared beliefs about how the world was made or
where it came from origins, how the world functions, and what is beyond it's about a lot
more than religion. For instance, a person can demonstrate his or her belief in gravity by
dropping a coin. On the floor is a pen. Another example is when someone argues that
the sun rises in the east and sets in the west. It appears to be morning when, in fact, it
is not because the planet spins according to a scientific fact. Biblical conceptions, in
general, appear to be focused on a biblical or spiritual framework.
1. The social and aesthetic dimensions of a community.
Individuals' actions, interactions, reactions, and expectations of one another. The social
Marriage and friendship, as well as roles such as mother or police officer, are examples
of institutions. Other human behavior patterns, such as social status and class. This
social dimension is important. Interested in how people connect with one another, as
are all examples of assumptions. It investigates the patterns of Roles and status
interactions, as well as the formation of organizations and institutions, are all examples
of this. On the basis of those patterns, institutions have been formed. In addition to the
which constitute the structure of beliefs that people have regarding what is good and
what is bad. The terms "beautiful" and "ugly," as well as "right" and "wrong," are used
the seemingly contradictory excuses that people use to justify their actions irrational or
incongruent. They are a result of our socialization rather than our intelligence. They can