A social event is exclusively part of the biological and behavioral characteristics of the human organism and is, therefore, predictable and potentially explainable by experimental analysis that excludes the historical.
A social event is part of a process that, although constantly changing, returns to similar forms again and again.
That is, social history occurs in cycles that allow for order and universality in explaining how human beings live together.
[7]Social events also tend to fall into distinct patterns, For example, as Nathan Rousseau points out: A marriage ceremony involves distinct actors engaging in joint actions in order to pull off a mutually recognizable social event.
It will be a social event that does not look like a funeral or a football game but rather one that conveys some notion of what the disparate parties understand as a wedding.