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by hardmath123 4345 days ago
Amazing. Japanese culture is the only one I know of where suicide is encourage and respected—is there any reason for that?
5 comments

I'd been raised in a semi-Japanese home environment but wouldn't call myself an expert.

Many people would point to the Bushido culture when it comes to the aura of honor surrounding suicide. However, I think it may go even deeper.

From what I understand, Japan has never been a fully self-sufficient economy. The peasantry were always under some feudal rule and a lack of resources had been the norm. Tragic practises like carrying the elderly into the woods to be abandoned and die were not uncommon. The elderly knew when they had become more of a liability than an asset to the family and graciously accepted their fate.

Referring to ubasute[0].Seems more to be an aspect of folklore and popular culture than an actual practice, although it has made for the premise of a good film [1].

[0] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ubasute

[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Ballad_of_Narayama_(1958_fi...

This might help your understanding: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bushido#Seven_virtues_of_Bushid...

As I understand it, the Samurai live by the 7 virtues: - Rectitude - Courage - Benevolence - Respect - Honesty - Honour - Loyalty

I wouldn't be surprised if these virtues continue to play a huge role in today's society. That said, I'm also not sure how serious people live by these virtues.

Read your link in more detail. The 7-virtue noble warrior-poets aren't actually how samurai behaved. That was a turn-of-last-century propaganda movement.
Hungarian culture also looks more positively on suicide than others. I learned this from Freakanomics, which did a very interesting episode on suicide: http://freakonomics.com/2011/08/31/new-freakonomics-radio-po...
Samurai?