Portal:Society
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Pope Benedict XVI (Latin: Benedictus PP. XVI; Italian: Benedetto XVI), born Joseph Alois Ratzinger on April 16, 1927 in Marktl am Inn, Bavaria, Germany) is the 265th and reigning Pope of the Roman Catholic Church, and as such, Sovereign of the Vatican City State.[1] He was elected on April 19, 2005 in a papal conclave, celebrated his Papal Inauguration Mass on April 24, 2005, and took possession of his cathedral, the Basilica of St. John Lateran, on May 7, 2005. Pope Benedict XVI has both German and Vatican citizenship. He succeeded Pope John Paul II, who died on April 2, 2005. (More...)
Sydney New Year's Eve Fireworks 2005. Photo credit: Kvasir |
Gender role · Greco-Buddhism · David Helvarg · Kashrut · Kibbutz · Ku Klux Klan · Sociocultural evolution · Tiananmen Square protests of 1989
· Weber, Max- ...that bread and salt is a traditional greeting ceremony (pictured) symbolizing hospitality in Slavic countries?
- ...that economist Barbara Ward, an early advocate of sustainable development, was the first woman ever to address a synod of Roman Catholic bishops?
- ...that the Ahmedabad Stock Exchange is the second oldest stock exchange in India, and first functioned under a banyan tree?
- ...that in the Penguins' Rebellion, over 800,000 Chilean high school students demanded education reforms from the government of Michelle Bachelet?
Society has its own nature, and consequently, its requirements are quite different from those of our nature as individuals: the interests of the whole are not necessarily those of the part. Therefore, society cannot be formed or maintained without our being required to make perpetual and costly sacrifices. Because society surpasses us, it obliges us to surpass ourselves; and to surpass itself, a being must, to some degree, depart from its nature—-a departure that does not take place without causing more or less painful tensions.
Emile Durkheim, The Dualism of Human Nature (1914).
- General Categories: Culture · Humans· People · Social groups · Society
- Areas of Study: Anthropology · Archaeology · Cultural studies · Demographics · Economics · History (esp. Classical studies) · Geography · Linguistics (esp. Pragmatics) · Media Studies · Political science · Religion · Social psychology · Social sciences · Sociology
- Age: Infant · Child · Youth · Young adult · Adult · Middle age · Old age
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- Geography: Cities · Human geography · Geography by country
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- Media: Communication · Mass media · Scandals
- Politics and Economics: Business · Employment · July 2005 London bombings · Movements · Nationalism · Politics · Security · States · Taxation · War · Transportation
- Private Life: Family · Personal life
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