Euthanasia - Pt 1 Flashcards
What is Voluntary Euthanasia?
- When a persons death is directly caused by another person at their request and with consent
- Most arguments assume the person requesting to die is suffering from a life-threatening illness and in great pain
What is Passive Euthanasia?
- When a doctor or physician withdraws life-sustaining treatment which indirectly causes death
- Alternatively the physician allows the patients death by ‘letting nature take its course’
What is Non - Voluntary Euthanasia?
- When a persons life is ended without their consent but with the consent of someone representing their interests
- A doctor or state may decide someone in PVS should have life-sustaining treatment removed
What is Palliative Care, why do people not call it euthanasia?
- Giving drugs and medicine to relieve pain but without directly causing death of patients
- Indirectly hastens death but not called euthanasia
- Treatment is passive (indirect killing)
- Care is active (directly reducing pain and killing)
What is the 1961 Suicide Act?
1) The rule of law whereby it is a crime for a person to commit suicide is hereby arrogated
2a) A person who aids, abets, counsels to procures the suicide of another shall be liable to a term not exceeding 14 years
2b) If on trail for indictment for murder or manslaughter it is proved that the accused ended, abetted, counselled or procured the suicide of the person in question, jury may find him guilty of the offence
Is the 1961 suicide act respecting autonomy and is it vitalist?
- May look like respecting autonomy, reinforces the principle of sanctity of life criminalising any form of assisted suicide
- Is not vitalist, it doesn’t value life to always be preserved, there are some cases where death is the better course of action
What was the case of Diane Petty?
2002:
- Paralysed form the neck down with motor neurone disease, asked for assisted suicide
- Lawyers presented a case on the basis of right to self - determination under Human Rights Act (1998)
How did the European Court of Human Rights respond to the case of Diane Petty?
- Denied, the law recognises the right to life, not corollary the right to death
- Decided she was not suffering a life-threatening illness, if she had been assisted suicide was more plausible, doctors would have not been direct cause
- Law valuing the Sanctity of Life?
What was the case of Baby Charlotte in 2005?
- Born prematurely with severe brain damage, illustrates that the law does not consider life to be absolutely sacred
- Against parents wishes the high courts ruled that doctors were to not resuscitate the baby if in a coma
- Her underlying condition ddi not justify the medical assistance she was being given to stay alive
Quote the proposal for a bill to allow physician aid in dying?
“enable a competent adult… to die at his own considered and persistent request”
What are objections to the allowance of the physician aid in dying bill?
- It will suffer from a slippery slope whereby what demeans as legitimate reasons for a persons death will also permit non-lethal conditions
- 2004 letter to the times of Lawyers and Philosophers argued, including John Haldane and Alasdair MacIntyre
What were some of the slippery slope arguments that came about?
- Supporters of the bills life from making the condition one of actual unbearable suffering from illness rather than the fear, discomfort and loss of dignity it brings
- If quality of life is grounds for euthanasia with those who request it, surely it can be extended to those who do not
- In the Netherlands where euthanasia is permitted there is evidence to show death against their wishes, this shows that the law cannot easily safeguard those who ignore them
How does Helga Kuhse oppose the slippery slope argument? (Quote)
- She asks for empirical evidence to back up their cases
- Most frequently cited argument is one of the non-voluntary euthanasia carried out by Nazis for eugenics
“no evidence that this has sent Dutch society down a slippery slope” - Companion to Ethics
What is argued about a weak sanctity of life view?
- It is just another version of the quality of life argument
What is the strong sanctity of life argument?
- Set out by vitalists
- A human life is always sacred because it possesses a God-given soul and that there are no ordinary or extraordinary means which justify its termination