{"id":4160,"date":"1996-06-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1996-06-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-77-no-3-summer-1996-the-soul-of-honour\/"},"modified":"2022-11-27T02:04:23","modified_gmt":"2022-11-27T02:04:23","slug":"vol-77-no-3-summer-1996-the-soul-of-honour","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-77-no-3-summer-1996-the-soul-of-honour\/","title":{"rendered":"Vol 77 No. 3 &#8211; Summer 1996 &#8211; The Soul of Honour"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">Honour comes at a stiff and stern price                     which people seem increasingly reluctant to pay in our self-indulgent                     society. But if we do not start giving more thought to how                     to live by its tenets, we may pay an even greater price in                     terms of personal and social distress&#8230;<\/p>\n<p> Is honour obsolete? One might almost think so. We have seen                     so little of it lately that it is natural to assume it has                     faded into history with the whalebone corset and the quill                     pen.<\/p>\n<p>In this age of elastic ethics, we are distinctly short of                     recent examples of honour posing an obstacle to personal drives                     for wealth and power. The nightly news is rife with dishonourable                     deeds that lead to injustice, tragedy and horror. And whole                     generations have passed since practically every grown-up person                     in western society knew what was meant by &#8220;a woman&#8217;s honour&#8221;                     and &#8220;doing the honourable thing.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>But if honour is dead, or at least moribund, then why do                     we talk so much about it? The word is so ubiquitous and is                     used in so many contexts that it can be downright confusing                     at times. An honour roll has nothing to do with an honour                     system, and an honour guard does not guard anybody&#8217;s honour.                     There is no connection between having an honours degree and                     doing the honours by carving the Christmas turkey. Honouring                     a debt and honouring thy father and mother are two different                     things.<\/p>\n<p>It simplifies matters to remember that the two main meanings                     of the word are interconnected. The first is a guide to good                     conduct, as in &#8220;code of honour&#8221; and &#8220;keeping honour bright.&#8221;                     The second is a distinction conferred on a person, an organization,                     or a family. The presumption is that if you behave with one                     kind of honour, you will be rewarded with the other. That                     is what social functions held in a person&#8217;s honour are for.<\/p>\n<p>In any case, the fact that people refer to it frequently                     does not necessarily mean that they grasp the fundamental                     concept of honour as a regulator of behaviour. If it seems                     out of style these days, that is because it does not fit easily                     into the psychology of a materialistic society which has little                     time for the things of the mind.<\/p>\n<p>We in the western world tend to subscribe to the fallacy                     that phenomena with no physical existence have no existence                     whatever. We are conditioned to be sceptical about abstractions,                     or about anything that cannot be seen or touched.<\/p>\n<p>Despite the fact that it exists only in people&#8217;s minds,                     honour has proved a tremendously powerful force over the ages.                     Philosophers have been almost unanimous in declaring that                     its practice is essential to both individual and social well-being.<\/p>\n<p>It has traditionally been viewed as a standard that towers                     above all other considerations &#8211; goals, desires, comforts,                     or whatever. Innumerable wise men and women have declared                     in all sincerity that their honour came before their very                     lives.<\/p>\n<p>To understand honour as a way of life &#8211; and death &#8211; we must                     reach back to the dawn of history. The concept evidently was                     a key factor in the way people conducted themselves before                     written records of human activity were ever kept.<\/p>\n<p>Homer&#8217;s <em>Iliad<\/em>, written in the 7th century B. C.                     and thought to be the first true work of European literature,                     is all about the loss, achievement and vindication of honour.                     In the mythology on which the epic poem was based, it was                     a quality conferred on humans by the gods, and was thus considered                     a sacred trust to be maintained at all costs.<\/p>\n<p>To a large extent, honour is responsible for the democratic                     system of government, because democracy would be unworkable                     without the trustworthiness that accompanies it when it is                     practised sincerely. In ancient Athens, politicians and public                     officials were prevented from abusing the privileges of office                     by swearing out unbreakable oaths to the gods.<\/p>\n<h3>The parable of the two temples<\/h3>\n<p>The Roman Empire officialized a variety of honour which                     has been with us ever since, that of a military unit. It suited                     the purposes of the empire&#8217;s rulers to have their soldiers                     believe it was honourable to win in battle and dishonourable                     to lose. Later, leaders everywhere learned that calls to uphold                     &#8220;the honour of regiment&#8221; could move men to valiant exploits                     and harrowing sacrifice. Military honour is enforced in our                     own times by the threat of a dishonourable discharge, which                     people in the armed forces still regard as the ultimate disgrace.<\/p>\n<p>Even as Rome&#8217;s fighting men were paying for honour in blood,                     Roman philosophers were examining its nature. Ovid, for example,                     concluded: &#8220;It is not wealth, nor ancestry, but honourable                     conduct and a noble disposition that make men great.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Legend had it that there were two temples in Rome, the temple                     of honour and the temple of virtue. It was impossible to enter                     the temple of honour without first passing through the temple                     of virtue. The lesson of this parable was that honour could                     not be inherited or purchased; it could only be acquired by                     good deeds.<\/p>\n<p>Honour and goodness were inextricably linked in the minds                     of medieval Europeans. They believed that a man&#8217;s sworn word                     was sufficient to establish his innocence or release him from                     civil liability. Under the law of compurgation, a defendant                     could be found not guilty by swearing out an oath and getting                     a required number of people to swear that they believed it.                     The principle, which seems impossibly naive by modern legal                     standards, was that respectable people can be expected to                     hold honour so dear that they will not lie under oath even                     to save themselves.<\/p>\n<p>The Middle Ages gave rise to chivalry, the code that ruled                     the lives of those famous figures, the knights in shining                     armour. They swore on their swords, which usually contained                     a saint&#8217;s relic in the hilt, to serve as defenders of the                     faith, upholders of justice, and champions of the oppressed.                     The most dedicated among them would disobey orders on the                     battlefield if they thought those orders would lead to dishonourable                     actions. It was the medieval equivalent of a person quitting                     a job or resigning from an office on a point of principle.<\/p>\n<p>The spirit of chivalry was by no means confined to Europe.                     Elite warriors such as the Samurai of Japan and the Rajputs                     of India were famed for fighting for their honour to the death.                     Indeed, honour is a concept that has always been recognized                     around the world, even in the most primitive societies. This                     tends to prove that human beings, wherever they are, possess                     an innate sense of fairness and dignity.<\/p>\n<p>Anthropologists have remarked on the similarities in traditional                     codes of behaviour practised on different continents. Without                     any contact between them, the ancient Celts and the Chinese                     both used the same word for honour &#8211; &#8220;face.&#8221; If one Celt impugned                     another&#8217;s honour to his face, he could be fined for it. To                     this day, Chinese people continue to believe that a loss of                     face leads to a kind of living death.<\/p>\n<p>The link between honour and life is a recurring theme in                     William Shakespeare&#8217;s dramas. &#8220;Take honour from me and my                     life is done,&#8221; Shakespeare wrote in <em>Richard II<\/em>. While                     the bard usually saw honour in a favourable light, he showed                     himself to be keenly conscious of its dark and destructive                     aspects. In <em>Othello<\/em>, the tragic hero kills his wife                     because he mistakenly believes that she has robbed him of                     his honour. In <em>King Henry the Fifth<\/em>, Shakespeare                     deplores the kind of honour that pushes men into being killed                     in vain on the battlefield: &#8220;Who hath it? he that died o&#8217;                     Wednesday&#8230; Therefore I&#8217;ll none of it: honour is a mere scutcheon,                     and so ends my catechism.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Honour makes a lethal compound when combined with wilful                     pride, and never more so than when it came to duelling. The                     practice of settling &#8220;affairs of honour&#8221; with the sword was                     particularly rampant in France. But it was also common throughout                     Europe, and remained so from the 17th to the late 19th century.                     Though various monarchs tried to put a stop to it, &#8220;It persisted                     almost everywhere, largely because of the utterly non-utilitarian                     caste-conscious principle at the root of it, that honour was                     its own thing, with imperatives that trumped all others,&#8221;                     as Professor Geoffrey Best has observed.<\/p>\n<p>A new type of duellist emerged in the American Old West,                     where inexpensive firearms meant that just about anyone could                     become a pistol-packing Cyrano de Bergerac. Gunfights erupted                     over the slightest insult to a gunslinger&#8217;s <em>amour-propre<\/em>.                     Shootouts were, of course, illegal. But the popular wisdom                     in frontier society was that manly pride came before the law.<\/p>\n<p>Lawlessness and perceptions of honour have often made a                     volatile mix. The Sicilian Mafia is known as &#8220;the Honoured                     Society.&#8221; Murders by thugs who feel their peculiar code of                     honour has been breached are an old tradition in the underworld.                     The highest dishonour in gangland is reserved for those who                     inform on colleagues, which amounts to breaking a pledge of                     trust. In a twisted way, then, there is honour among thieves.<\/p>\n<p>Honour was at stake in the feuds waged between families                     and clans from Corisca to Scotland to the American Appalachian                     Mountains. It is a short step from the honour of the family                     or clan to the honour of a nation. The latter is also prickly                     and also deals in revenge.<\/p>\n<h3>The destructive side of the concept lives on<\/h3>\n<p>In 1870, Napoleon III and his ministers announced that Prussian                     designs on the throne of Spain constituted an affront to the                     honour of France. Their declaration of war on Prussia led                     to a humiliating defeat, the imposition of onerous war reparations,                     and a large loss of French territory. The theory that the                     honour of France could not be restored while the captured                     territories remained in &#8220;enemy&#8221; hands helped to bring on World                     War I, which took a toll of 10 million lives. The loss of                     face by the Germans in that conflict helped to bring on yet                     another appalling bloodbath in World War II.<\/p>\n<p>Documents show that the French leaders in 1870 were actually                     less concerned with the honour of the state than with its                     political and strategic interests. The call to defend the                     honour of France served as a handy device to whip up public                     support for war. Honour has been used in any number of circumstances                     as a stalking horse for less lofty motives. &#8220;The louder he                     talked of his honour,&#8221; Ralph Waldo Emerson wrote, &#8220;the faster                     we counted our spoons.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Where does all this history leave us today? As far as the                     destructive side of honour goes, much the same as ever. Motorcycle                     and street gangs still settle their accounts in blood when                     they feel their honour has been breached, and political leaders                     still invoke national honour as a reason for resorting to                     armed force.<\/p>\n<p>Like junior Mafioso, contemporary schoolboys abhor and scorn                     a &#8221; squealer.&#8221; Gentlemen who believe that their honour has                     been impugned still seek to punish their abusers, although                     instead of going after their blood with a sword, they now                     go after their money in libel suits.<\/p>\n<h3>It is older than ethics, and more clear-cut<\/h3>\n<p>&#8220;The law often permits what honour forbids,&#8221; as the philosopher                     Jacques Saurin noted. If people in western countries now feel                     beset by a legalistic, bureaucratic and over-governed system,                     it may be because honour has been superseded by legality.                     Acting with honour means putting oneself in the position of                     living up to commitments without being forced to do so. Honourable                     people need not be coerced into keeping their word by laws                     or regulations. More honour among the public would mean less                     crowding and waiting time in the courts.<\/p>\n<p>Instead of asking &#8220;Is it legal?&#8221; more people ought to be                     asking themselves before taking an action, &#8220;Is it honourable?&#8221;                     That applies as much to private as to public life. We keep                     being told, for instance, that many of the more-severe personal                     problems in our angst-ridden times stem from a lack of self-esteem.                     Honour may be just what the doctor (or the psychiatrist) ordered                     for those who suffer from a bad self-image. Nothing makes                     people feel better about themselves than the sure knowledge                     that they have done the right thing. Conversely, by avoiding                     dishonourable acts, people avoid the self-reproach that leads                     to low self-esteem.<\/p>\n<p>Of course, acting with honour presupposes that one knows                     what it is all about. It does not speak well for the public                     awareness of the basic rules of good conduct that ethics have                     to be taught to high school students in the classroom rather                     than in the home. Still, honour is older than ethics, and                     far more clear-cut and simple. Only a few points about it                     need to be remembered. Honour means honesty in the sense of                     telling the truth and in dealing with people without trickery                     or hidden motives. It means not taking unfair advantage of                     others, not betraying others, living up to one&#8217;s promises,                     paying one&#8217;s debts, and keeping one&#8217;s word.<\/p>\n<p>Conventional ethics of the sort debated in courses and seminars                     offer loopholes that the more rough-hewn code of honour does                     not recognize. It has no room for sophistry or self-justification,                     or for what you can get away with without getting caught.                     It cannot be moulded into shape to fit expediency. There might                     be such a thing as situational ethics, but there is no such                     thing as situational honour. Either you have it in all situations,                     or you have it in none.<\/p>\n<p>It would be a relief to see a politician on an election                     campaign refrain from twisting the facts to suit the situation.                     Some politicians indulge in outright lies on the premise that                     the furtherance of their cause is more important than simple                     honesty. Nowhere is there more talk about honour than in Parliament,                     but any sceptical observer of its proceedings might wonder                     whether the appellation &#8220;the Honourable Member&#8221; is a prescriptive                     or a descriptive term.<\/p>\n<h3>The tradition of honour in business still prevails<\/h3>\n<p>Honour seems to be lacking in many other fields of activity.                     Great institutions engage in sneaky coverups, and former bastions                     of pristine conduct such as military schools turn out to harbour                     nests of liars and cheats. Media personalities renege on promises                     of confidentiality for the sake of a titillating sound bite,                     and businesspeople sell products they know to be defective.                     It is as though the modem worship of success has made people                     forget the standard rule of conduct expounded by Sophocles                     in the 8th century B. C.: &#8220;Rather fail with honour than succeed                     by fraud.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>One sign of just how unfashionable honour has become is                     that people talk about it in euphemisms such as conscientiousness                     or accountability. If there is one widely used synonym that                     strikes to its core, it is the word integrity. Integrity is                     defined as &#8220;the quality of being unimpaired; wholeness, completeness.&#8221;                     By that standard, it is just as impossible to be half-honourable                     as it is to be half-pregnant. &#8220;Honour is like the eye, which                     cannot suffer the least impurity without damage,&#8221; as the French                     philosopher Jacques Boussuet wrote.<\/p>\n<p>If honour is indivisible, it is also non-transferable. Its                     presence or absence is nobody&#8217;s business but your own. Just                     as the knights of old disobeyed orders that would lead to                     discreditable acts, the narrow course of honour decrees that                     you resist the blandishments of others to do dishonourable                     things because they are convenient or pleasurable or lucrative.                     In what has been dubbed &#8220;the psychological society,&#8221; we are                     all too ready to excuse ourselves, putting the blame for our                     moral failings on our upbringing, our environment, or &#8220;the                     system.&#8221; Honour precludes such diversions of blame to anything                     or anybody else.<\/p>\n<p>The great cop-out for dishonourable behaviour is that &#8220;everybody&#8217;s                     doing it.&#8221; The sweep and intensity of the media have made                     ordinary people aware of just how much duplicity and dirt                     exist in the world. Accustomed as they are to demonstrations                     of sleaze, people have become more cynical than ever about                     the yawning gulf between ideals and practice. Why cling to                     high personal standards when, evidently, nobody else gives                     a damn?<\/p>\n<p>The difference between pretence and practice might lead                     the cynical to believe that honour is nothing more than a                     psychological device invented by elites to get the masses                     to do their bidding. It may be pointed out quite correctly                     that even the great ideal of chivalry deteriorated in many                     cases to oppression and pillage by so-called white knights.                     But even cynics have to admit that the fact that a thing is                     abused does not make it into a bad thing in essence. The chivalric                     code was based on the best of intentions. In the instructional                     literature of the order of chivalry, its members were specifically                     enjoined to sacrifice their own interests to the common good.<\/p>\n<p>While the knights were engaging in their jousts and looking                     around for maidens in distress to save, something much more                     important was happening in the shops and counting-houses of                     medieval cities. Merchants and traders were developing and                     refining a system of honourable dealings which still prevails.<\/p>\n<p>Any business that is done without an actual exchange of                     goods or money on the spot is conducted on the assurance that                     when business people make a commitment, they are honour-bound                     to live up to it. Today, our whole vast global financial and                     trading system rests on the honour of the participants. Financial                     transactions in the billions are concluded on the understanding                     that people and institutions will honour their debts.<\/p>\n<p>Thus, far from being a thing of the past, honour is as modem                     as the satellite and the computer. We could not get along                     without it. Still, everyone would benefit by paying more attention                     to its nature and terms.<\/p>\n<p>Obviously the whole world would be just that much better                     off if more people in all walks of life were to tell the whole                     truth and nothing but the truth, stick faithfully to their                     commitments, and refrain from taking unfair advantage of people                     and situations. It would be a good thing for all of humanity                     if honour were given less lip-service and more thought.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[62],"class_list":["post-4160","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-62"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Vol 77 No. 3 - Summer 1996 - The Soul of Honour - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-77-no-3-summer-1996-the-soul-of-honour\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Vol 77 No. 3 - Summer 1996 - The Soul of Honour - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Honour comes at a stiff and stern price which people seem increasingly reluctant to pay in our self-indulgent society. 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But if we do not start giving more thought to how to live by its tenets, we may pay an even greater price in terms of personal and social distress&#8230; Is honour obsolete? 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