Worldview is a system of beliefs, beliefs, life values, knowledge, which is formed throughout life.
The worldview of the majority in relation to what is good, what is bad and how one should behave in connection with this is called morality.
Worldview determines the purpose of life, the way of life, the habitual position of perception, as well as the habitual center from which we evaluate reality (the center of power, order, poverty, abundance, and so on).
Formation of a worldview
The worldview changes and is formed throughout life — as a result of upbringing and simply life experience. The worldview of the child is simple and narrow — to rejoice at mom, want candy, cry and be sad if they didn’t give it.
The child grows and his worldview grows with him — and he is already worried about tasks that are much more global and broad — from the desire to work to the desire to make humanity happy.
And sometimes it becomes a new candy for a grown up, but immature child: to want a big salary and cry and be sad if they didn’t give it, instead of working and achieving what you want.
The older a person is, the more conscious his worldview is — and it is no longer based on beliefs, but on beliefs and knowledge. An adult person knows why, and most importantly, why he does this and not otherwise, he is aware of this and is aware of his responsibility — for his life, for the fate of his work, and partly for the fate of the people around him.