Euthanasia Flashcards

1
Q

Voluntary euthanasia

A

this applies when a life is ended painlessly by a third party at their own request

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2
Q

Non-voluntary

A

this applies when a person is unable to express their wish to die but there are reasonable grounds for ending their life painlessly

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3
Q

Daniel James

A

Became paralysed from the neck down, lawyer describes as being “in fear and loathing of his daily life”.
was voluntarily euthanized in Switzerland.

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4
Q

Francis Ingels

A

Mother who killed her braindead son Thomas Ingels as she thought it would be what he wanted.

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5
Q

Sancity of life

A

the idea that life is intrinsically sacred or has such worth that it is not considered within the power of a human being

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6
Q

Quality of life

A

weighs the extrinsic experience of life, that affects or justifies whether or not it is worth continuing.

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7
Q

Personhood

A

the quality of a human being

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8
Q

Arguments for no death

A

Aquinas: “suicide is an unnatural act and a rejection of God’s gift of an immortal soul” God kills and makes alive
Kant: have a duty to not commit suicide, furthers us from summon bonum
Daniel Burden: “life does not end when you’re paralysed”

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9
Q

Arguments for human reason being unreliable

A

Hays: “reason itself is always culturally influenced
Hooker: diagnosis could be incorrect
Barth: “human reason is corrupt and cannot be trusted”

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10
Q

Arguments for autonomy

A

Hans Kung: “an all merciful God would give dying humans the responsibility of making a conscious decision about the time and manner of their death”
Kevorkian: “what counts is what the patient wants”

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11
Q

Marry Anne Warren

A

must have consciousness, reasoning, the capacity to communicate, self motivated activity, presence of self concepts and self awareness in order to have a good enough quality of life.

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12
Q

Arguments for minimizing pain

A

More: cannot live in misery should die if in pain with no hope
Popper: Negative utilitarianism

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13
Q

Fletcher

A

-40 IQ probs not a person
-20 IQ definitely not a person
most loving thing would be to euthanize

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14
Q

C.S Lewis

A

“agape is the real and adorable image of the divine”

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15
Q

Pence

A

killing people who want to die is not wrong as they are actually dying

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16
Q

2 Examples 14 scholars

A

James Daniels
Francis Ingels

Aquinas
Kant
Daniel Burden
Karl Barth
Hooker
Hays
Kevorkian
Hans Kung
Marry Anne Warren
More 
Popper
C.S Lewis
Fletcher
Pence
17
Q

Henry Sidgwick

A

only conscience beings can appreicate values and meanings so they see life as significant

18
Q

4 presuppositions

A

pragmatism- must be practical and work towards the end that is love

relativism-there are no moral absolutes

positivism-decisions must begin with love

personalism-human beings come first and not treated as means

19
Q

6 propositions

A
  • agape replaces the law
  • end justifies the means
  • love has no favourites
  • the only that is good in itself is love
  • the most loving thing is situational
  • love and justice are inseparable