This treatise is a profound sociological analysis, drawing on the work of Ronald Inglehart, examining the mechanisms of generational value crystallization. Adopting a participant-observer perspective, the author reconstructs the grammar of social order and explains how the scarcity and socialization hypotheses shape contemporary political attitudes. The text illuminates the global cultural map, analyzing the shift from survival values to postmaterialist self-expression in the context of existential security. The text also considers the role of religious capital and communication pluralism in stabilizing democratic systems. This is a key work for understanding the evolution of contemporary conflicts over the quality of life and the function of axiology as decision-making maps that reduce information noise in a dynamically changing society.
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