top | item 42038388 (no title) ad8e | 1 year ago Yes. At Caltech, you'd be socially ostracized by your friends if people knew you were cheating, or helping another person cheat. discuss order hn newest dataflow|1 year ago That wasn't really my question. I was asking if the person helping other people in another class cheat would be violating the honor code. Not whether your friends would ostracize you if they find out you're cheating. cottsak|1 year ago If you can't see that "helping other people in another class cheat" is violating the honour code then you might benefit from taking the time to do so.> Failure to realize the consequences of a course of action does not justify it.https://deans.caltech.edu/documents/24878/Honor_Code_Handboo... load replies (1)
dataflow|1 year ago That wasn't really my question. I was asking if the person helping other people in another class cheat would be violating the honor code. Not whether your friends would ostracize you if they find out you're cheating. cottsak|1 year ago If you can't see that "helping other people in another class cheat" is violating the honour code then you might benefit from taking the time to do so.> Failure to realize the consequences of a course of action does not justify it.https://deans.caltech.edu/documents/24878/Honor_Code_Handboo... load replies (1)
cottsak|1 year ago If you can't see that "helping other people in another class cheat" is violating the honour code then you might benefit from taking the time to do so.> Failure to realize the consequences of a course of action does not justify it.https://deans.caltech.edu/documents/24878/Honor_Code_Handboo... load replies (1)
dataflow|1 year ago
cottsak|1 year ago
> Failure to realize the consequences of a course of action does not justify it.
https://deans.caltech.edu/documents/24878/Honor_Code_Handboo...