Umm 'doing the right thing' and 'more to do with ethics than morals'
would suggest that Honour is bound up in ethics.  Just an aside then
if ethics is concerend with doing what is right, and morals are
concerned with questions of what is right or wrong, then can it be
true that ethics are as subjective as morality?

Aside over.

More I need more people, I'm trying to understand this concept of
honour.  Honour killings for example strike me as well not really
honourable at all, the honour of the family, what does that actualy
mean?

On 25 Sep, 13:32, rigsy03 <[email protected]> wrote:
> Well, an individual must abide by the code of his/her culture although
> one can walk away from dishonour and generally pay a steep price for
> it. I think it means doing the right thing despite the cost.
>
> On Sep 25, 6:48 am, Pat <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > On 25 Sep, 12:13, Lee <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > It seems an easy enough question.  What is it, what does it mean to
> > > have it, what acts are honourable and what not?
>
> > It mostly depends on culture.  It was honourable to the Aztecs to be
> > sacrificed to Quetzalcoatl, I doubt many today would feel the same.
> > Thieves, at one time, had a code of conduct, making some theiving
> > honourable and other thieving not honourable.  Seppuku (harakiri) is
> > considered honourable in Japanese culture, but viewed as simple
> > suicide and damnable by the West.  Roughly, honour (like good and
> > evil) is, like its opposite, shame, an opinion/perception and is
> > relative.- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -
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