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... Life in general should include a phase where one recognizes what is right or wrong, moral or immoral. One differentiates right and wrong when one has gained the appropriate skills to identify the two from each other. One must have experience with a situation in addition to the primary knowledge of what is right and wrong. For instance, one sees a boy deliberately hit another individual. ... Either I was (A) told by my parents or (B) was told by peers or a responsible adult elsewhere. ... When children become older, they begin to remember what their parents may have said and practice that word because one’s parents’ word is like God’s word when everything else fails. So with the boy hitting the other individual situation, one’s parents must have told him whether that act is right or wrong. ... This is why it depends on the nurturing of a child whether or not one can pinpoint right or wrong.
One only has the option of pinpointing right or wrong when in fact they had some guidance as a youngster. If one has not had guidance at all during his or her life, then one could possibly plead unawareness, or in other words lack of knowledge. ... What about if one reaches the crux of a situation, such as the characters in Minority Report at a later age in life?
Approximate Word count = 1056 Approximate Pages = 4.2 (250 words per page double spaced)
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