This is a somewhat odd question since most people believe that traditions and funerary practices should be respected. I could, however, argue that they should not. The amount of real estate devoted to cemeteries is quite substantial, and this real estate is often in very valuable urban locations, and perhaps we as a species should be more practical in the way we use a limited resource, in a world in which the population has gotten to be quite large (currently in excess of 7 billion people). The living need the land more than the dead do. Cremation is much more efficient, and the ashes can be kept in an urn, if you feel a sentimental attachment to them. Even aside from the issue of real estate, funerary practices in general are very elaborate and expensive (at least for those who can afford them) and really, the dead do not care or notice how much money we spend on their funeral observances. I personally do not need rituals to help me to remember people who were important to me when they were alive. It is their lives that matter, not the rituals that accompany their death.
Yes, we should respect our traditions and rituals as they are a part of our past and we should be proud of our culture and traditions. But if rituals and funerary practices involve violence they should not be respected as by hurting someone we can't gain anything.
This is a somewhat odd question since most people believe that traditions and funerary practices should be respected. I could, however, argue that they should not. The amount of real estate devoted to cemeteries is quite substantial, and this real estate is often in very valuable urban locations, and perhaps we as a species should be more practical in the way we use a limited resource, in a world in which the population has gotten to be quite large (currently in excess of 7 billion people). The living need the land more than the dead do. Cremation is much more efficient, and the ashes can be kept in an urn, if you feel a sentimental attachment to them. Even aside from the issue of real estate, funerary practices in general are very elaborate and expensive (at least for those who can afford them) and really, the dead do not care or notice how much money we spend on their funeral observances. I personally do not need rituals to help me to remember people who were important to me when they were alive. It is their lives that matter, not the rituals that accompany their death.
privacy is 1) The right to be let alone; (2) in insurance contexts, the right to fair personal information practices. I think that privacy should be respected
Adults should be respected because they have more experience than younger people.
To preserve their cultural traditions, to retain the identity in a multicultural society and to pass on cultural practices to new generations so that they would be aware.
Adversaries should be respected, not feared.
children should be respected because if you don't respect them they won't respect you and won't listen to you they will do what they want and also they will adapt bad habits.
Yes, many religious scriptures emphasize the importance of respecting teachers and their wisdom. Teachers are often seen as guides and sources of knowledge in various traditions, and showing them respect is a sign of reverence for their teachings.
all girls should be respected
The lesson from "The God Stealer" is that culture should be respected and not exploited for personal gain. The story highlights the consequences of trying to profit from another culture's sacred artifacts, emphasizing the importance of understanding and preserving cultural traditions.
yes,i think there should be because its promote discipline
the three reasons why young people should know about their culture are:to preserve their culture traditions,to retain the identity in a multicultural society and to pass on cultural practices to generations so that they would be aware