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Traditions originate, presumably, as a result of attempts to answer vital questions -- questions that are vital for the human beings who originate and perpetuate the traditions. Traditions continue, then, presumably, as long as they are taken (or mistaken) to answer the vital questions of the succeeding generations of human beings who perpetuate them --  if not simply because of cultural inertia or because they can be conveniently co-opted for some noncommunicative, merely strategic purposes. But insofar as traditions originate and are perpetuated as answers to vital questions, they are always subject to critical appropriation by employing the ultimate, or primal, criteria implicit in the basic questions, the basic suppositions, and the open commitments underlying them.

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