Mimi Hunter

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A failure to follow their explicit signposts of good behavior, a failure to balance obligations or to foresee contingencies is a shame ihaji). Shame, they say, is the root of virtue. A man who is sensitive to it will carry out all the rules of good behavior. ‘A man who knows shame’ is sometimes translated ‘virtuous man,’ sometimes ‘man of honor.’ Shame has the same place of authority in Japanese ethics that ‘a clear conscience,’ ‘being right with God,’ and the avoidance of sin have in Western ethics.
The Chrysanthemum and the Sword: Patterns of Japanese Culture
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