- Mon Dec 02, 2024 5:48 pm
#110906
Hi miriamson,
You asked:
"Or, is it possible to interpret "take for granted" as meaning that the anthropologist isn't consciously aware of his culture's workings?"
That's exactly the idea. Because the anthropologist is so familiar with his own culture, he fails to notice the workings of his culture. For example, to use a recent cultural "holiday"practice, it may not seem odd to the anthropologist (assuming he is American) that millions of Americans go shopping on Black Friday (the day after Thanksgiving) in order to buy stuff on sale despite facing enormous crowds, traffic, and lines because that's just what many Americans do, so why question it. However, to someone from another culture, this may seem like quite odd behavior.
The definition of the expression "takes for granted" that is most relevant to this answer is "fail to properly appreciate (someone or something), especially as a result of overfamiliarity." This is exactly what the passage describes we do with our own thoughts "we become so expert in making ... inferences about our thinking that we fail to notice that we are making them" (lines 35-38).
Notice how similar the words "fail to properly appreciate" match the key words in the passage "fail to notice" (line 37). These are getting at the same general idea.
The key to answering these questions is to prephrase the general underlying explanation and find the answer that is the closest match. It doesn't have to be perfect, it just needs to be closer than the other answers.