Author - James The Traveller - 5th October 2023 - 2136 Words

Honour is a very high concept and value.


To understand honour, one must understand a whole host of other sub concepts which make up honour.


Honour encompasses the qualities of dignity, integrity, morality, sovereignty, intelligence, independence, trust worthiness, reliability, justice, honesty, care and courage.


If one does not have intellectual dignity, they dishonour themselves by believing in lies.


If one does not have integrity, cannot stand by their word and a code of conduct, then they are not honourable.


If one violates objective morality, they have no honour.


If one is not sovereign, they are not in control of their actions and thus cannot be honourable, as for one to be honourable they must be conscious of why they do what they do.


If one is not intelligent, if they cannot discern what is the right thing or the wrong thing in circumstances that may be difficult to distinguish, how can one behave honourably if they don’t know how to?


If one does not wish to be a dishonourable parasite, then they must be independent and self sustaining.


If ones word cannot be trusted, if they break promises and have been proven to violate confidentiality, they are not an honourable man.


If one cannot be relied upon, then they are a liar and an immature child, thus there is no honour in the unreliable.


If one has no sense of justice, then they have no sense of honour. An honourable man does not commit injustice acts.


One who is dishonest with themselves or others cannot be honourable, for honour values the truth and being honest is communicating the truth.


One must care about the truth, about rational values, about morality and about doing the right thing to be honourable. If one had no care about the right thing, no care about doing the best for themselves and for others, then how could one be considered honourable?


If one lacked the courage to do what is right when the time to act was before them, then they are not honourable. Cowards have no honour.


There may be even more qualities which are necessary to fully understand honour, but the above qualities are enough to have a sufficient grasp on the value of honour.


Honour is the value which protects that which ought to be protected. Honour protects oneself from the dangers of ones weakest self and honour protects others from the threat of wrong doing and evil.


Life is the power which gives direction and momentum to a man (otherwise he is motionless, stagnant and dead), honour is a magnetic field, a state of being which attempts to exert its influence to steer ones life and direction onto the right path.


If a mans purpose is to establish peace on earth, his life is the vessel which allows him to sail towards this purpose, without his vessel, he cannot travel towards his destination.


Honour is the trait which ensures that on his way to achieving peace, he does it the right way.

For honour knows that one could achieve peace on earth in many manners which would not be honourable and would be in fact evil.


Take Emperor Palpatine from star wars for example. His goal was to establish peace throughout the galaxy. Although, his methods were tyrannical and out right evil. He wished for peace, but had no honour to guide him. Because of this, his idea of peace was dystopian, not Utopian. It may have been his personal Utopia, but a true Utopia is only when Utopia is Utopian for all, not just for one or a few.


If an honourable and dignified man had the option to take a covid vaccine or to be killed, he would choose death. For there are some values that are too important to sacrifice, even in the face of death.


One who has a rational set of values, who values his freedom and ability to live life as his own master, will not sacrifice those values for the value of his life.


Man has to constantly evaluate whether he should compromise his honour to prolong his life or if he should compromise his life to maintain his honour.


If life is mans foundational value, which everything else depends upon, then honour is his highest value, the reason man has values in the first place. Honour is the goal of mans system of values. Man values his life so then he can become honourable, the most accomplished value man can achieve. What a real man, or woman, should do in their life is become honourable. Why be honest, have dignity or be trustworthy if not for a greater purpose, a higher goal, that ambition to become honourable?


Honour is not the only worthy or high value to achieve. But it is the most rewarding and influential value. An honourable man does not have to be compassionate, but he can. He does not necessarily do the right thing because of compassion, but because of a strict adherence to a code. Compassion may help him to stick to his code of honour, but is not a requirement.


Compassion is a great value to strive for, but it is not as large or as influential in its actions as honour. For one may be compassionate, but a stupid coward. A stupid yet compassionate coward has less impact in the world then an honourable man lacking compassion.


Although, for a honourable man to continue rising in honour, it would be wise to adopt the value of compassion, for he could become more honourable in doing so, but again, it is not a necessity.


Honour is the morally correct method for acting in life, as it is simultaneously a reward for the execution of correct action.


A man may conquer the world, control every mind, have everything he wants and demands, be a king of kings, yet have no honour. What value is a man, or any intelligent being, who has no honour?




Life without honour is a scourge, a cancer on those who want to live honourably.


A samurai may kill a 1,000 people, yet if it was all in fair duels, then he has honour. He did not murder out of hand those who did not consent to duel him.


Honour is the personification of all that is good, right, fair, noble, just and honest. It’s mans interaction with himself and the world in such a manner. One cannot be considered a man until he has honour. He is either still a boy who hasn’t grown into an honourable man yet, but has the potential to, or a monster.


If a man punches his woman in the face for yelling at him, he has no honour.


If a man goes to war and fights against others who willingly want to fight, then this is honourable (to the extent of the context).


If a man rejects learning about vaccines, dismisses the fact that vaccines make atom bombs look like fire crackers in comparison, yet still injects his daughters with poison, he has dishonoured himself and his family, he is not fit to be a father or a man.


If one wears a mask to protect themselves from imaginary illnesses, refuses to learn how he has been duped into believing a lie, then he is dishonourable and unworthy of life, for he is rejecting his own right to life by allowing himself to be ruled by lies.


Everyone makes mistakes. When one makes a mistake and besmirches there honour, there does exist the chance for them to redeem themselves. If they do, they can regain their honour. If they do not, then they are a dishonourable husk, either a beast or a boy who failed to grow up.


There are some who shirk the path of honour because they have chosen a path of evil, the path of the sub human, the monster. Then there are those who prefer to be interested in trivial matters, to evade their evolution and growth from a child into an adult.


It is dishonourable to willingly and consciously choose to live by a code of evil, but it is highly questionable if it is even more dishonourable to not even choose a code, of right or wrong, to stay as an ignorant and inexperienced child, in an isolated bubble of immaturity.


To choose ignorance, to not learn the code of honour, which is the code of right, or to choose to learn evil, which is the code of wrong, is a dishonour to ones existence as a being with the potential for consciousness. It is a disgrace that one has such little intellectual dignity that they will not honour themselves enough to even learn the difference between right and wrong.


To honour oneself is to treat oneself right, in accordance with how they should, with the utmost respect and care.


When one receives an honour, they receive a public recognition of an honourable deed.


To know if someone is honourable or not, check to see of they always do the right thing. If they do, then they are honourable. If not, then they are not honourable.


To determine if you are honourable, find out if you really know what this concept means by checking how you react in certain situations where the opportunity to be honourable arises.


A magistrate or judge has no honour, as one who is honourable would never demand another to call them a title, for this is a dishonourable act.

A police officer has no honour, as they stalk and attack innocents in packs with weapons.


A politician has no honour as they lie and speak garbage.


A banker has no honour, creating money out of thin air and demanding you repay him, or else he has legal right to take your property.


To be honourable is to act in accordance with what is right. To do the right thing requires a whole host of qualities.


Is how you earn money honourable? Are the groups, ideas and beliefs you support honourable? Do you act with honour every day to the best of your ability?


Honour is a unique quality in the way it is so large and encompasses so many other sub concepts, is a necessity for one to be good, yet it is also a trademark of those who are great.


If one does not act with honour, then how could they be good? When a man does act with honour, he is good, as to be good, one must be honourable, as to be honourable means that one embodies all the qualities, aspects and behaviour of goodness. An honourable man does not do wrong and does many things right. He is not perfect, an honourable man can also become a greater man by integrating more desirable qualities, such as compassion, rapport building skills and generosity, but a man cannot be great without first being honourable.


To be honourable means to always do the right thing whenever there is an opportunity to do the wrong thing. If society is demanding he wear a mask, take a vaccine or do something, anything else, an honourable man does not simply bow to demands without rational thought and accurate judgement.


An honourable man does not and cannot simply know what is right from wrong in every situation.


An honourable man must be calculating, analytic, judgemental and evaluate every unique situation as best he can before acting.


He must relate every situation that places a demand upon his honour back to his measurements of how he should act.


That measurement is his total character.


He may know the right thing to do instantly in some situations, but this is only because he has rationally thought about what he would do in XX scenario and so therefore has predetermined his course of action.


He may hate littering, so when he sees someone litter, he knows he will speak up. He knows that the msm is nonsense so whenever they spew propaganda, he will ignore them. For new situations an honourable man has not come across, he must first figure out what the right thing to do is, as it may be unclear and it is best for him to not act one way or another until he is sure of the right path.


Consider a situation where it was easy for you to discern the honourable path and a situation where it was difficult.


An honourable man is not impulsive, he is methodical, precise and accurate in his behaviour and deeds. He does not suffer from violent mood swings or long lapses in his character. He holds firm and steadfast to his character and does not allow his emotions to cloud his better judgement.


An honourable man is the result of a rational man putting in the work.


Utopian Realism

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