- Traditional values
Traditional values refer to those
belief s,moral codes , andmores that are passed down from generation to generation within aculture ,subculture orcommunity . Since the late 1970s in theU.S. , the term "traditional values" has become synonymous with "family values " and imply a congruence with orthodoxChristianity . However "family values" is arguably a modern politicized subset of traditional values, which is a larger concept, anthropologically speaking. It is also not necessarily a political idea, though has come to be associated with a particular vein ofEvangelism and politics, embodied by some American politicians such asRonald Reagan ,Dan Quayle , andGeorge W. Bush , and theChristian right more broadly, as embodied for example byPat Robertson . For a clearer sense of the range of differences, one can compare interest in reviving traditional values in Native American communities, such asRed Lake Indian Reservation , to theFamily Research Council . Or, within Christianity, the difference can be seen in the interpretation of the idea byC. S. Lewis andJerry Falwell .In its own right "traditional values" simply means the values coming from
tradition rather than any specificphilosopher , moralist, orwriter . Hence the "traditional values" of non-Western societies may be wildly at variance from anyChristian Right notion of Family values. Societies based on traditional values often embraceanimism andancestor worship rather than anyAbrahamic religion .Confucianism also tends to place high value on the maintenance of traditional culture and values. It is related to the concept oftraditional authority andfolk culture .That said, the term does apply to Abrahamic cultures as well. It can mean the actual values that are claimed or perceived to have remained relatively unchanged for centuries, for example the values in the
Apostles' Creed , the preservation of theCoptic language inCoptic Christianity , the values in theHadith , or certain rites inOrthodox Judaism . In Christianity, maintaining tradition is perhaps most valued in theRoman Catholic Church ,Eastern Orthodox Christianity , andOriental Orthodoxy , although within Protestantism theOld Order Amish and someAnglo-Catholics could be deemed to place a strong value on traditional values. Historical research often shows that traditions and immutable values, in fact, change more over time than most adherents recognize.The term can also refer to an intention to preserve ancient or traditional customs and values against anything deemed "innovation." In Abrahamic religion
Old Believers andtraditionalist Catholics can be deemed to be champions of "traditional values." InZoroastrianism those who oppose conversion as being against the religious tradition generally deem themselves to be a force for "traditional values." Radical elements ofHindutva are also intent to keep any Christian or other "foreign" religious values from entering their society, although their more modern views onHindu law might make their relation to traditional values more complex than this implies. There are alsoHopi traditionalists who wish to keep Christianity and other "foreign" religions from gaining a foothold amongst their people and who prefer thatNative American languages be used instead of English, Spanish, and so forth.Attempts at creating a kind of universalized "traditional values" has proved generally difficult or even impossible. It is generally fair to say that usually traditional values tend, by definition, toward
conservativism and that they often, but not always, accept some form ofpatriarchy as normative.ee also
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Asian values
*Continuing Anglican Movement
*Folk religion
*Old Church Slavonic
*Paleo-Orthodoxy
*Sacred Tradition
*Society of St. Pius X
*Traditional Chinese law
*Traditional knowledge
*Traditionalist School
*Vishva Hindu Parishad
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