Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 April 2021
The development of concepts of autonomy and paternalism, as applied to children, women, the mentally ill and mentally retarded, and the elderly, has been a remarkable journey for philosophers, lawyers, physicians, caregivers, and politicians. Autonomy and paternalism have moved together in uneasy company to new definitions and applications derived in an extended dialectical process that has not only refined the definitions but also moved them away from the extreme ends of the gamut. To the extent that autonomy is equated with independence of action and paternalism is equated with coercive actions contrary to an individual's wishes or desires in order to achieve a beneficent end, we have exercised some of the most extreme and benighted paternalism while permitting in some sectors of our lives great independence on grounds of classical autonomy. Refinements of these concepts have moved us to new levels of sophistication and have made us aware of new issues and problems with which we have yet to wrestle.