honor is that one gives up his self for friends.

On Sep 25, 5:32 am, 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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