Chap.
1 I | respect, man is always a person, an "individual" distinct
2 II | over that of the individual person who serves as subject for
3 II | consent of the interested person is not secured, and that
4 II | possible progress but the human person who applies it and who obeys
5 II | under these norms, but the person who dedicates himself to
6 II | that of the rights of the person who lends himself to psychological
7 II | exclusive property of the person himself (here regarding
8 II | his interior world that a person reveals only to a few confidents
9 II | make an attempt against a person's corporal integrity without
10 II | ascertain whether the interested person has not overstepped the
11 II | no injustice done to the person who consents. ~Let Us first
12 II | sometimes to a cautious person for serious reasons. Because,
13 II | not even to one cautious person. ~As for the principle [
14 II | namely, the right of the person to protect his interior
15 III| both the personality of the person who practices psychology
16 III| act becomes moral if the person involved gives his valid
17 III| that certain actions lay a person open to the dangers of violating
18 III| themselves, or because the person who enacts them lacks the
19 III| are immoral because the person who enacts them has no right
20 III| through positive proof by the person who assumes it and based
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