Tradition and conformity values are especially close motivationally; they share the
goal of subordinating the self to socially imposed expectations. They differ primarily in the
objects to which one subordinates the self. Conformity entails subordination to persons
with whom one frequently interacts—parents, teachers, and bosses. Tradition entails
subordination to more abstract objects—religious and cultural customs and ideas. As a corollary, conformity values exhort responsiveness to current, possibly changing expectations. Tradition values demand responsiveness to immutable expectations from the past.