Social practice:
Social practice in a broad sense is the sum total of various activities of human beings to understand and transform the world. That is, all kinds of activities that all mankind or most people engage in, including understanding the world, using the world, enjoying the world, transforming the world, etc. Social practice in a narrow sense refers to holiday practice or off-campus practice. Practice has many meanings. The classic view is that subjectivity is seen in the objective, including the inevitability of objective to subjective and the inevitability of subjective to objective. Practice is a social activity in which people actively transform and explore all objective substances in the real world. The basic characteristics of practice are objectivity, initiative and social historicity. Basic forms of practice: economy, politics, military affairs, education, science and technology, culture, health, sports, nationality, religion, justice, social security, social management, social communication, employment and social security, and public services.