First of all, the "collective model" in which the adults participated in a village and each family as a unit kidnapped a child who was completely ignorant of the world, and even among these kidnappers there were many mothers who had become mothers. These "adults" teach their children in an absolute authority model, even in kidnapping cases making their own children accomplices in "authoritative" oppressive ways because that's what they think is "right" solution, and children are just too young to understand. This is much like the social model we have today, it's not just in adult-child relationships, it's in every one of our social relationships, where a "collective power" controls right and wrong to "judgment" the fate of the few and " control" the behavior of a few. Comparing the worldviews of the adult world and the children's world is the best way to reflect, one is full of curiosity when you first came to this world, and the other is "taught" by this world for many years.
The phrase "you will understand when you grow up" accounts for a large part of each of us's growth experience, but in fact, many things can't be justified by moral explanations. The solution for children may not be what adults call "right", but it is the simplest, direct and most sincere expression for children to face the world. Yes, maybe we all "understand" when we grow up, but there is no "understanding" in it.
I read a passage a long time ago, and the general understanding is that "we all think we look down on children, but we look up at them".
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