At his age, probably not. But, provided the individual does not die of some other cause before the time comes, there does seem to come a point where spatial awareness, reflexes, coordination, etc. are have simply decreased too much due to age, but an individual, especially if they have been capable and independent their whole lives, is reluctant to face this fact. My grandfather, when he got up into his eighties, and had a series of mini-strokes, became thus impaired, and caused a minor fender bender. My grandmother and her younger sister at one point had to go out and stand behind his car, refusing to move, as he tried to back the car out onto the street. She saw his diminished capacity, even if he didn't want to admit it to himself. It wasn't long after that that the mini-strokes put grandad in a wheelchair too, and he spent the last several years of his life as an invalid, which I know was pure hell for the man.
By contrast, my grandmother herself knocked the side view mirror off a parked car on our street several years later, and she never drove again, only keeping the car after that to have other people (like me sometimes) give her rides to places she needed to go. She wasn't too proud to admit it to herself when she was no longer safe behind the wheel.
I think that after the age of say, seventy-five, eighty at the latest, drivers should probably have to undergo a yearly driver safety evaluation. Dick Van Dyke seems in fantastic shape for his age, but at ninety-five, his ability to drive safely and cope with the unpredictability of other drivers is probably substantially diminished.
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