Originally posted by Lorizael
Generally the idea is that children are not fully developed, and thus do not yet have a fully developed sense of morality. So when they do something wrong, you need to show them that it is wrong and express your discontent. With adults, they are already supposed to know that it is wrong, so there is only so much that you can do.
That being said, I think doing something to your child with the specific intent of upsetting them is pretty stupid, because I am against using emotion as a personal force.
Generally the idea is that children are not fully developed, and thus do not yet have a fully developed sense of morality. So when they do something wrong, you need to show them that it is wrong and express your discontent. With adults, they are already supposed to know that it is wrong, so there is only so much that you can do.
That being said, I think doing something to your child with the specific intent of upsetting them is pretty stupid, because I am against using emotion as a personal force.
But putting that aside and assuming you are correct, wouldn't that situation call for the opposite reaction? If your son steals your prized bottle of wine because he is not developed fully and doesn't fully understand what he is doing, then you should sit him down and talk to him. Explain why what he did was wrong, how it hurt you, and basically do to him what Ben suggested the wife do to her husband.
On the other hand, if you are dealing with a person with a full understanding of right and wrong who is a competent, intelligent human (in the husband example) then the assumption is he knows full well what he did was wrong, but choose to do it anyway. No amount of talking or reasoning will fix that. He did something wrong on purpose. The only appropriate response to that is punishment or some kind of restitution. Except, that's not the course of action anyone would propose for a husband.
Does my logic err? Does anyone else find this switch in reactions a bit odd?
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