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16 Examples of Mores

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Mores are values, rules and meanings that are widely internalized in a culture. The following are illustrative examples.

Values

Values such as the idea that America values freedom.

Symbols

Meaning attached to symbols by a culture such as the mores that people show respect for a national flag.

Beliefs

Shared beliefs such as a culture that believes in a deity.

Exceptionalism

It is common for national cultures to believe that the nation is exceptional. For example, the historical belief that Japan is the only country that has four seasons. This is still a surprising persistent belief to this day in Japan that some people still hold but is perhaps no longer a mores.

Morals

Mores and morals come from the same root word, the Latin moralis. It is a common mistake to equate the two. Morals are principles of right and wrong. Mores can apply to questions of tradition, expectations and routine that aren't questions of right and wrong. However, morals can be mores and vice versa. For example, the moral principle that children have a right to play.

Cultural Universals

Mores can be common across cultures or can be a universal feature of culture. For example, the practice of giving each person a name.

Customs

Customs such as the practice of having a funeral when someone passes away.

Politeness

Principles of politeness such as the idea that you should help people to save face where you can. This is often important in collectivist cultures.

Etiquette

Technical rules of politeness such as the modern mores that you cough or sneeze into your elbow if you don't have a tissue.

Expectations

Shared expectations such as the expectation that a job will provide days off and holidays.

Hygiene Factor

A hygiene factor is an expectation that doesn't make an individual happy if it is met but makes them very unhappy if it's not met. For example, the mores that a flight will at least provide free water. This will not improve customer satisfaction if met but will dramatically reduce it if not met.

Roles

Roles such as historical mores related to the roles of men and women. For example, the expectation in many cultures that men must be willing and prepared to sacrifice their lives to protect a nation, women and children in the context of danger or war.

Identity

Prevalent ideas about the identity of a nation or culture. For example, the idea that a monarch is an important traditional role and symbol of a nation.

Myth

Myths are stories that are important to a culture such that people find meaning in them. This should not be confused with the common usage of the term to mean "incorrect information." For example, the story of the founding of a nation that is important to its identity.

Traditions

Traditions such as praying before a meal.

Pastimes

Shared experiences that are expected and valued. For example, a national holiday.

Mores vs Norms

Mores and norms have much the same meaning with the difference being that mores are necessarily tied to national and traditional cultures and are commonly internalized. Norms can be weaker and more flexible. They can extend from a national or traditional culture but can also extend from small or overlapping cultures such as the culture of a neighborhood, punk rock subculture, culture of sport or culture of an organization. Mores are always norms but norms aren't always mores.
Another major difference better mores and norms is that mores are sometimes encoded into law whereas the term norm implies social enforcement. Mores can include the fundamental moral principles of a society upon which laws are based.
Mores
Norm
Definition
Values, rules and meanings that are widely internalized by a national or traditional culture.
Values, rules and meanings that are recognized by a culture, subculture or super culture.
Example
Beliefs about marriage.
The expectation that you arrive on time for meetings within a particular team culture.
Enforcement
Laws
Regulations
Social Pressure
Social Pressure

Society

This is the complete list of articles we have written about society.
Broken Windows
Centralization
Cities
Civic Duty
Civilization
Collectivism
Communism
Community
Conformity
Consumer Society
Culture
Culture Lag
Decorum
Democracy
Duty
Economic Systems
Education
Equality
Freedom
Group Harmony
Herd Behavior
Herd Mentality
Identity
Ideology
Justice
Media Freedom
Medicalization
Middle Class
Mores
Multiculturalism
Paternalism
Power Distance
Public Sector
Resilience
Responsibility
Rights
Rules
Social Capital
Social Class
Social Constructs
Social Mobility
Social Status
Society
Systems
Technocracy
Tolerance
Traditions
Upper Class
Upward Mobility
Working Class
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Norms

The definition of norms with examples.

Shy vs Reserved

The difference between shy and reserved behavior explained.

Social Constructs

The definition of social construct with examples.

Broken Window Theory

The definition of broken window theory with examples.

Humility

The definition of humility with examples and counter examples.

Culture Examples

A list of examples of culture.

Duty

The definition of duty with examples.

Cultural Diffusion

The definition of cultural diffusion with interesting examples.

Tolerance

The definition of tolerance with examples.

Society

The definition of society with examples.

Political System

The definition of political system with examples.

Rights

The definition of rights with a list of examples.

Freedom Of The Press

The definition of freedom of the press with examples.

Natural Rights

The definition of national rights with a list of examples.

Authoritarianism

The definition of authoritarianism with examples.

Civic Duty

The definition of civic duty with examples.

World Population

A list of countries by population.

Life Expectancy

An overview of life expectancy for developed nations.
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