Trial as an adult is a situation in which a juvenile offender is tried as if they were an adult, whereas they will receive a long sentence at a young age. — Wikipedia
The reason children are treated as innocent and less liable for their actions is not because of their body age but because of their mental age. — TheMadFool
Are you sure about that? When I interact with a child, I don't gauge their mental age first and then decided how to treat them. I treat them like a child because they look like a child - because their body is like a child. If during the course of conversation I notice that the child is "mature for their age" I may treat them differently - but initially I'll treat them like a child because they appear like a child. — Hermeticus
Pertaining to law, there is a solid reason why you'd want to take the "body age" rather than the "mental age". Both concepts of IQ and mental age are actually heavily criticized as a measurement. There are too many factors for intelligence and different tests will come to different results. The law however can not allow for such variety. It needs to be clearly defined otherwise people will exploit any possibility of variety and find loopholes around the law. It requires hard and objectively measurable facts - like the age of the body which is clearly documented by a birth ceritificate - rather than a soft and subjective measure like IQ. — Hermeticus
I'm also a bit (actually a lot) troubled by the fact that a sizeable percentage of criminals have low IQ. — TheMadFool
So you would treat a progeria child patient as an elderly citizen? — TheMadFool
A child is a child because of mental age but an adult is an adult because of body age — TheMadFool
We only know the criminals who get caught, and it's more likely that the police will catch the dumbest ones first, who are also more likely to commit a crime because they think that they will get away with it. — Vince
You're confusing chronological age and biological age. — Vince
A 25 year old man is like a child compared to a 50 year old man — Miller
Basically, if you have a low IQ, you're a child trapped in an adult body and vice versa for high IQ folks. — TheMadFool
Basically, if you have a low IQ, you're a child trapped in an adult body and vice versa for high IQ folks.
— TheMadFool
Not so, because adults have more experience in life than children, even if they have a relatively low IQ. Low IQ isn't a severe mental impairment. Granted, it's not an advantage, but someonep with an IQ of 85 or 90 is not mentally retarded. Children with IQs of 120 to 130 do not thereby have extensive experience. Life experience is an important aspect of intelligence. Brains without experience don't have much to say. — Bitter Crank
Years lived do not necessarily translate into experience. — TheMadFool
Of course not. But it takes years lived to get experience. — Bitter Crank
I find Gretta annoying and Donald Trump revoltingly loathsome. However, he became President and neither of us did. (I don't know--maybe you tried and failed; I didn't even try.) Apparently he had enough experience to fill the bill for the idiot bastards in the Republican Party. — Bitter Crank
It's not a matter of IQ, it's a matter of brain development. Children's brains are still forming, including those parts of the brain that allow one to control impulses. IOW they need to be controlled by others and are in the process of being taught how to have self-discipline, control over impulses and so on. An adult with a low IQ is NOT the same — Bylaw
Neuroplasticity - yes, children's brains. However, hazarding a guess, going out on a limb here, most modifications/adaptations are in software and not in hardware. — TheMadFool
The brain is highly plastic in juvenile development. As an example a kid (aged 8 yrs I believe) who had half his brain blown out due to a stray bullet still went on to get a degree at university. When components are lost other areas grow to take over (another case of a child born without a cerebellum being able to walk).
I don't see what sense it makes to talk about hardware and software when referring to the human brain in reasonable detail (even as an analogy it can often give the wrong impression) — I like sushi
As an illustration, take a 5 year old child, confine him to a cell for 50 years and let him out into the world on his 55th birthday. — TheMadFool
Basically, if you have a low IQ, you're a child trapped in an adult body and vice versa for high IQ folks. — TheMadFool
It would be a very rare case that lacked maturity in general. As far as certain social relations, absolutely. But then what they lack is neuroplasty in comparison. We are talking about a much more entrenched situation.You're right of course but the truth remains some chronologically adult (18 +) people have the mental maturity of a 5 year old toddler. — TheMadFool
If you become a London cabby your brain will change in those areas to do with spatial memory. Physical changes. New pathways atrophy others become mroe likely to fire. Unless you are bringing in a dualism - something I don't necessarily have anything against, but my guess is you and others might - software is hardware in brains. You can see that children have different brains, having to do with regulation of emotions and impulses for example. You can see it in MRIs. It's not some invisible software.Neuroplasticity - yes, children's brains. However, hazarding a guess, going out on a limb here, most modifications/adaptations are in software and not in hardware. — TheMadFool
As an illustration, take a 5 year old child, confine him to a cell for 50 years and let him out into the world on his 55th birthday. How experienced is this 55 year old? — TheMadFool
This preassumes IQ as a measure of being grown up. A quite childish assumption. — Cartuna
It would be a very rare case that lacked maturity in general. As far as certain social relations, absolutely. But then what they lack is neuroplasty in comparison. We are talking about a much more entrenched situation. — Bylaw
I think this argument would make sense in relation to Cartuna if he was using the school system as an authority.This, if anything else, is an endorsement of IQ as a measure of how "grown up" one is (skipping grades puts a child among older students). — TheMadFool
But I didn't say that there are low numbers of adults who immature in some way..There are a lot of clips/videos available online that discuss and poke fun at how immature adults are. Either that means something or it doesn't. You be the judge. In short, you maybe mistaken regarding the low numbers of immature adults (oxymoron). — TheMadFool
And certainly in the sense of not being able to hold them accountable for criminal acts. In the context of judging people responsible for their acts, even the ones who are immature to a level of 5 years old - feel free to produce some statistics around this so we can see how important an issue this is and also whether is correlates with IQ - cannot them be lose in society. If there is an adult with the maturity of a 5 year old and they have committed a crime, they probably need to be institutionalized. So, as part of an argument for reducing the sentences of low IQ adults I see many holes.It would be a very rare case that lacked maturity in general — Bylaw
One, does IQ directly correlate with maturity? — Bylaw
Two, given that adult brains are more fixed, even if there are adults who have low IQs and this leads to criminal acts, there is still good reason to sentence them differently from 5 year olds and even 15 year olds. — Bylaw
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