 Western culture, sometimes equated with Western civilization, Occidental culture, the Western world, Western society, and European civilization, is a term used very broadly to refer to a heritage of social norms, ethical values, traditional customs, belief systems, political systems and specific artifacts and technologies that have some origin or association. The term also applies beyond Europe to countries and cultures whose histories are strongly connected to Europe by migration, colonization, or influence. For example, Western culture includes countries in the Americas and Australasia, whose language and demographic ethnicity majorities are European. The development of Western culture has been strongly influenced by Christianity. Western culture is characterized by a host of artistic, philosophic, literary and legal themes and traditions, the heritage of various European peoples. Christianity including the Roman Catholic Church, Protestant Heisman the Orthodox Church, has played a prominent role in the shaping of Western civilization since at least the fourth century as did Judaism particularly Hellenistic Judaism and Jewish Christianity. Before the Cold War era, the traditional Western viewpoint identified Western civilization with the Western Christian Catholic Protestant countries and culture. The cornerstone of Western thought, beginning in ancient Greece and continuing through the Middle Ages and Renaissance, is the idea of rationalism in various spheres of life, especially religion, developed by Hellenistic philosophy, scholasticism and humanism. The Catholic Church was for centuries at the center of the development of the values, ideas, science, laws and institutions which constitute Western civilization. The empiricism later gave rise to the scientific method during the Scientific Revolution and the Enlightenment. Ancient Greece is considered the birthplace of many elements of Western culture, with the world's first democratic system of government and major advances in philosophy, science and mathematics. Greece was followed by Rome, which made key contributions in law, government, engineering and political organization. 22 Western culture continued to develop with the Christianization of Europe during the Middle Ages and the reform and modernization triggered by the Renaissance. The Church preserved the intellectual developments of classical antiquity and is the reason many of them are still known today. Medieval Christianity created the modern university 2324 the hospital system 25 Scientific Economics 2621 natural law which would later influence the creation of international law 27 and numerous other innovations across all intellectual fields. Christianity played a role in ending practices common among pagan societies, such as human sacrifice, slavery 28 Infanticide and Polybamy 29 the globalization by successive European colonial empires spread European ways of life and European educational methods around the world between the 16th and 20th centuries.Citation needed European culture developed with a complex range of philosophy, medieval scope, lasticism and mysticism and Christian and secular humanism. 30 page needed rational thinking developed through a long age of change and formation, with the experiments of the enlightenment and breakthroughs in the sciences. Tendencies that have come to define modern western societies include the concept of political pluralism, individualism, prominent subcultures or countercultures such as new age movements and increasing cultural syncretism resulting from globalization and human migration.