Mayhaps, but perhaps you haven't achieved the necessary understanding to connect the sub-threads.Diogenes wrote: Wizwom said that people who are mentally ill have a right to do what they want too. I provided the example of the autistic kid who was prevented from running out into high speed traffic. The fact that it was a kid involved is irrelevant to the point, unless you are going to argue that autistic kids should be protected while autistic adults should not.
Somehow I don't think you are going to make that argument.![]()
You are mixing up more than one subtopic thread.
For the following discussion, I choose to take your statement about running into traffic to illustrate the doing of something potentially dangerous to ones-self.
Rule # 1: People (all sapient beings) have the right to voluntary action. PERIOD!
So; yes, the autistic child has the right to run out into traffic if he wants to (ignoring for the moment the violation of the driver's right to voluntary action). So does the autistic adult. (I shall now wait a second for you to stop screaming).
What you have to ask is "what does voluntary mean?"
For our purposes, let us leave it as "to knowingly and responsibly accept the outcome of an action". Children, though they have the right to do a bunch of things, seldom have the capacity to volunteer. This is essentially what being a "child" means. So when an adult gets a child to do something like... (choose your own bad thing for children); the child has done NOTHING wrong. The child has every right to do that bad thing. The adult on the other hand has almost certainly done something wrong to the child as it is doubtful that the child had the capacity to volunteer for that bad thing. Thus the adult has involved a child involuntarily, the definition of wrong.
What is fundamentally right does not change from person to person (voluntary action). Whether a specific incident is right or wrong depends on the state of the "voluntary involvement".