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EUTHANASIA

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Title: EUTHANASIA


1
EUTHANASIA
Powerpoints prepared by Dr. Peter Vardy,
Vice-principal, Heythrop College, University of
London
2
  • If a person had a favourite dog or cat which was
    in great pain they might want to put it out of
    its misery and, indeed, it might be considered
    wrong if the person failed to do this.
  • If, when someone are old, are in great pain,
    cannot feed yourself, have a colostomy bag,
    cannot sleep without drugs, cannot walk and have
    made their peace with their friends and children,
    their may feel that a peaceful death is a
    reasonable choice to make.
  • One danger, however, is that old people may be
    made to feel that they are a nuisance and quietly
    pressurised to choose to die.
  • In order to understand the different perspectives
    on this issue, it is essential to understand the
    ethical assumptions underlying different
    positions.
  • Often people are not aware of the assumptions
    underlying the arguments and sometimes rhetoric
    is substituted for careful analysis.

3
Dr. Jack Kavorkian
  • Kavorkian helped a number of people to die in the
    U.S. using the Mercitron machine. There are
    various types but the idea behind them is that
    the person wishing to die not only takes the
    decision but actually performs the action that
    brings about death hence Kavorkian helped to
    put people in a position where they could take
    their own life. It was not, he therefore argued,
    murder and was bringing release to people from a
    life of great pain and suffering.
  • However he was nicknamed Dr. Death and was
    sentenced to a prison term
  • The devices he used are shown on the following
    slides.

4
Dr. Jack Kavorkian with the Mercitron
5
DIFFERENT ETHICAL THEORIES
  • IN CONSIDERING EUTHANASIA, OR ANY OTHER ETHICAL
    ISSUE, IT IS FIRST ESSENTIAL TO DECIDE ON THE
    THEORETICAL ETHICAL FRAMEWORK TO BE ADOPTED.
  • THE POSSIBILITIES INCLUDE
  • The Bible or Holy Book such as the Quran
  • Natural Law
  • Proportionalism
  • Situation Ethics or
  • Utilitarianism

6
The Bible
  • It is not possible to absolutise the sixth
    commandment (Thou shalt not kill).
  • This is put forward in Exodus Ch. 2013 but the
    very next chapter (Ex. 21 12 - 16) gives four
    reasons for killing a human being
  • 1) if you strike your parents,
  • 2) if you kidnap someone,
  • 3) if you murder someone or
  • 4) if you curse your parents.
  • The Bible has no universal prohibition against
    killing - it endorses war and provides for
    capital punishment.
  • It does not even condemn the four cases which it
    records of suicide Saul (1 Sam. 314)
    Anthithopel (2 Sam. 17 23) Samuel (Judges
    1630) Judas (Matt. 275)

7
APPEAL TO REVELATION IN SACRED TEXTS
  • Revelation is claimed by various religious
  • Jews will appeal to the Torah and Talmud
  • Christians to the Christian scriptures
  • Muslims to the Quran
  • BUT differences immediately arise as to how these
    texts are to be interpreted. None of them deal
    unequivocally with modern ethical dilemmas
    whether in the field of genetics, abortion,
    homosexuality, just war, crime and punishment or
    other issues.
  • Much will depend on how the text is interpreted
    and there will be considerable disagreements.

8
THE STATUS OF SACRED TEXTS
  • There are considerable differences within all
    religions as to the status of their sacred texts,
    as to the role of reason, individual conscience
    and the teaching authority of any central body.
  • Within Christianity
  • The Catholic Church attaches great importance to
    the teaching authority of the Magisterium in
    Rome,
  • In the Protestant tradition more emphasis is
    placed on the Bible and
  • Anglicans value the early Church Councils
    Tradition the Bible and personal experience.
    More recently the Lambeth conference and
    decisions of local synods have become influential.

9
  • Because so many issues are raised by appeal to
    sacred texts, most arguments about euthanasia are
    based on philosophic grounds as reason is held to
    provide a common meeting point for those from
    different traditions.
  • If someone simply says My sacred texts asserts X
    and I am not willing to discuss this further
    then it becomes difficult to engage in debate
    with those who do not accept the status of these
    texts or who interpret them differently.

10
FOUR ETHICAL THEORIES(Very briefly!)
  • Natural Law
  • Situation Ethics
  • Proportionalism
  • Utilitarianism

11
NATURAL LAW
  • The Natural Law approach to ethics has its
    origins in the philosophy of Aristotle.
  • St. Thomas Aquinas writing between 1265 and 1274
    c.e. used Aristotles philosophy to provide an
    intellectual grounding for Christian moral claims
    and also for NATURAL THEOLOGY.
  • Natural Theology claims that reason can arrive at
    the existence of God. NATURAL LAW claims that
    human reason can be used to arrive at what is
    morally right or wrong.
  • Nothing in revelation contradicts reason so
    reason and revelation go hand in hand.

12
ARISTOTLE AND AQUINAS
  • Aquinas followed Aristotle in claiming that all
    human beings (and all animals and plants of the
    same genus or species) share a COMMON NATURE.
  • To be morally evil is to freely choose to FALL
    SHORT OF THE HUMAN NATURE WHICH ALL HUMAN BEINGS
    SHARE.
  • If, therefore, one can work out what it is to be
    human, one can then arrive at which acts are
    morally evil.
  • Acts which go against what it is to be human are
    intrinsically evil. They are evil in and of
    themselves.

13
Situation Ethics
  • Situation Ethics was put forward in its most
    developed form by the Anglican Joseph Fletcher in
    1965.
  • It is a CONTEXTUAL and SITUATIONAL approach it
    therefore rejects the DEONTOLOGICAL approach of
    Natural Law.
  • It has been condemned by the present Pope and the
    Catholic Magisterium as a position that no
    Catholic may hold. Some consider that it may not,
    therefore, be taught in Catholic institutions.

14
Situation Ethics.
  • Fletcher claims that Jesus came to reject the Law
    i.e. the Jewish Torah. It was too inflexible
    and attempted to transform the spirit that lay
    behind the law into fixed rules.
  • Fletcher said there is no ethical system that can
    be said to be Christian.
  • Jesus two commands to love (God and neighbour)
    are the foundation and heart of all Christian
    morality.
  • There are no moral absolutes except love
    everything depends on what is the loving thing to
    do in the particular situation.

15
PROPORTIONALISM
  • This is based on the Natural Law approach and
    stems from the Catholic tradition. Many Catholic
    moral theologians maintain that it is more
    faithful to this tradition than a strict Natural
    Law approach.
  • It holds that there ARE firm moral rules BUT
    THERE CAN BE EXCEPTIONS if there is a
    proportionate reason which would justify this.
  • It maintains that an action maybe objectively
    WRONG but morally RIGHT and that another action
    may be objectively RIGHT but morally WRONG

16
Proportionalism contd.
  • A distinction has to be made between acts which
    are good and acts which are right - and this
    distinction, proportionalists maintain, is often
    not made.
  • A person may have a good intention but may be
    able to achieve that intention only through an
    act which is considered to be, in itself, evil.
  • The proportionalists hold that it is possible for
    an action, in itself, to be wrong, whilst based
    on the actual situation in which the action is
    done the action may be morally right.

17
UTILITARIANISM
  • This aims for the greatest happiness or the
    greatest good for the greatest number of
    people. It was put forward by Jeremy Bentham but
    modified by John Stuart Mill.
  • Bentham considered pleasure was a single thing no
    matter what its source, but Mill considered that
    there were higher and lower pleasures for
    instance listening to music and writing poetry
    were higher pleasures than piggy pleasures
    such as food, drink and sex because these are
    shared with animals.
  • Once one differentiates between higher and lower
    pleasures, however, a criteria is being
    introduced that goes beyond mere happiness.

18
Central to the debate about euthanasia are
  • 1) Does God exist and do human beings have a duty
    to God in considering how to behave?
  • 2) Is the maintenance of life an absolute value
    which no other good can outweigh?
  • 3) Does one hold that an act is morally right or
    wrong because of the very nature of the act or,
    by contrast, does one hold that it is the
    consequences of the act which make it right or
    wrong?
  • 4) Is euthanasia the start of a slippery slope
    that may justify the killing of handicapped
    people and others?

19
Key distinctions in the debate about Euthanasia
20
DIRECT AIM OR A BY PRODUCT?
  • It is important to separate
  • Acts whose direct aim and intention is the
    bringing about of death (euthanasia falls under
    this heading) and
  • Acts such as providing pain relief whose main
    purpose is not to bring death but may cause death
    as a side-effect. There is generally considered
    to be no moral problem with the second of these
    positions.

21
The principle of double effect
  • This is a long established principle in ethics
    that an action may have more than one effect. If
    the side effect is regrettable but inevitable,
    then it is still permitted.
  • For instance, the removal of the cancerous womb
    in a woman is a good action and is permitted even
    if, as a by-product, the life of a foetus may be
    destroyed.
  • In the case of euthanasia, the giving of drugs to
    relieve pain is permitted even if, as a
    by-product, the death of the person is hastened.
    The early death is then a by-product of a good
    action.

22
ACTS OF OMISSION AND COMMISSION
  • Acts of Omission involve not doing something (for
    instance not giving a blood transfusion) whilst
  • Acts of Commission involve a positive action
    (administering an injection or giving tablets).
  • Leaving someone to die (subject to certain
    caveats) would fall under the first heading and
    would not be classified as euthanasia.
  • The British Medical Association recognises a
    distinction between withholding treatment that
    may be burdensome and deliberately bringing a
    persons life to an end. Its 1988 statement on
    Euthanasia maintained that the deliberate
    bringing to an end of life should remain a crime.

23
ORDINARY AND EXTRAORDINARY MEANS
  • A distinction needs to be drawn between
    ordinary and extraordinary means - this was
    particularly important in the days of warfare
    before anaesthetics when a decision could be made
    to forego amputation even if this meant the death
    of the individual.
  • Extraordinary means effectively means
    disproportionate means - in other words means
    of attempting to save life which are out of
    proportion, in terms of the pain and degradation
    suffered, to the possibility of prolonging life.
  • A major problem is what is decided to be
    extraordinary means and in relation to what is
    this to be measured (e.g. length of subsequent
    life quality of life pain during the procedure,
    etc.)

24
ORDINARY MEANS
  • Ordinary means has been taken to include air,
    water and food. If this is accepted, then it can
    never be permissible to deprive someone of these
    even if they are in a permanent coma and even if
    these have to be administered in ways that are
    highly invasive.

25
  • THE CATHOLIC DECLARATION ON EUTHANASIA

26
CATHOLIC DECLARATION ON EUTHANASIA 1980
  • The document represents the official moral
    position on euthanasia of the Roman Catholic
    Magisterium (the teaching authority in Rome)
  • Even though this is not an 'infallible' teaching,
    it is still normative for the Catholic community.
    As 'normative' this moral position calls for the
    presumption of truth on the part of the faithful
    who ought to attend carefully to this teaching.
  • Since 1990, all Catholic priests prior to
    ordination (except for members of a few religious
    orders) have to sign an oath giving religious
    assent of will and intellect to all teachings of
    the Magisterium). This means that the
    Magisteriums teaching is effectively binding on
    priests and, Cardinal Ratzinger, the Head of the
    Holy Office, has said that this teaching must be
    accepted by the laity as well.

27
Key Principles in the Catholic declaration
  • 1) The Value of Human Life
  • This recognises that most people regard life 'as
    something sacred'. There are three norms
  • 1)The Universal prohibition against attempts on
    the life of an innocent person.
  • 2) The Universal duty to live one's life in
    accord with God's plan that human life be
    fruitful and find its full perfection in eternal
    life.
  • 3) The Prohibition of suicide on the grounds that
    suicide rejects God's sovereignty and plan.

28
Euthanasia
  • The document recognises that the word has
    different means for different people. It defines
    euthanasia as "an act or an omission which of
    itself or by intention causes death, in order
    that all suffering may in this way be
    eliminated."
  • It is not permissible for one person to do this
    to another or to ask for it for oneself even when
    this request comes from the experience of
    prolonged and barely tolerable pain.
  • The document holds that the pleas of gravely ill
    people who ask for death should be seen as an
    anguished plea for help and love, not only in
    terms of medical care, but also for human and
    supernatural support and comfort.
  • THIS LAST POINT CAN BE DEBATED

29
III. The Meaning of Suffering for Christians and
the Use of Painkillers
  • Whilst seeing that some things e.g. prolonged
    illness, advanced old age, bring about
    psychological conditions that facilitate the
    acceptance of death, nevertheless, death is
    something which naturally causes people anguish.
  • Suffering may so exceed its biological and
    psychological usefulness that it can cause the
    desire to remove it in any way and at whatever
    price. It accepts that only a very few who can
    limit the dosage of pain killers to associate in
    a conscious way with the sufferings of Christ.
  • Most people will want to use pain killers and may
    do so even though the drugs will reduce
    consciousness and shorten life. Death is then a
    by-product to pain relief (principle of double
    effect)

30
Due proportion in the use of remedies
  • The document says that it is "Important to
    protect, at the moment of death, both the dignity
    of the human person and the Christian concept of
    life against a technological attitude that
    threatens to become an abuse."
  • The document interprets the phrase 'the right to
    die' as "rather the right to die peacefully with
    human and Christian dignity."
  • Decisions about how the ill will live whilst
    dying should be taken by the sick person.
  • The documents cites with approval an alternative
    distinction between 'proportionate' and
    disproportionate' means. Disproportionate means
    to preserve life occur when the gains of
    continuing life outweigh the costs to the patient.

31
Proportionalism in Euthanasia
  • Proportionalism is the Declaration's basic
    approach to applying the traditional principle of
    ordinary/extraordinary means when solving
    dilemmas affecting the duration of life.
  • It advocates weighing of relative values (such as
    risk, cost, burden to patient and benefit) and
    recognises that some means are disproportionate
    to the result sought.
  • When death is imminent, an individual may in good
    conscience "refuse forms of treatment that would
    only secure a precarious and burdensome
    prolongation of life, so long as the normal care
    due the sick person in similar cases is not
    interrupted.

32
GERMAIN GRISEZ JOSEPH M BOYLE jr. Life and
Death with Liberty and Justice Notre Dame Press
(1979) p336-439
  • These authors challenge what they see as two
    basic assumptions of a pro-euthanasia position.
  • 1) The assumption that there is a distinction
    between bodily life and personal life. In other
    words they reject the view that one can cease to
    be a person and yet still be bodily alive.
  • 2) They also reject the consequentialist position
    that consequences determine the rightness or
    wrongness of human actions.
  • Their basic premise is that there are certain
    basic human goods constitutive of human
    well-being. The fundamental human goods which are
    inherently worthwhile and give meaning to one's
    life and serve as motives for human action
    include play and recreation knowledge of truth
    and appreciation of beauty, life and health,
    friendship and self-integration (NOTE the
    inclusion of life in this list)..

33
Grisez and Boyle - 2
  • These goods cannot be measured against one
    another in order to establish any form of
    hierarchy.
  • These basic human goods provide motives for moral
    action and are the source of the moral obligation
    to promote human well-being.
  • Once this is accepted, then it can never be right
    to act against one of these basic goods.
  • If this is accepted, then euthanasia would be
    absolutely prohibited because it intends to
    realise some good (such as freedom or dignity) by
    directly turning against one or more basic goods
    (life or health).Euthanasia wrongly assumes that
    the choice for death over life can be morally
    right because it serves the higher goods of
    freedom, integrity or dignity.

34
JOSEPH FLETCHER
  • Fletcher is an advocate of SITUATION ETHICS and
    he is a consequentialist (a position specifically
    rejected by the Vaticans Veritatis Splendour)
    - in other words Fletcher believes that the
    rightness or wrongness of actions are to be
    judged not according to something intrinsic to
    the action but in terms of the consequences of
    the action.
  • This is directly opposed, therefore, to the
    position taken by Grisez and Boyle.
  • Fletcher rejects any absolutes and believes that
    the situation has to be taken into account and a
    decision has to be made as to the most loving
    thing to do in the circumstances.
  • Fletcher maintains that there is more to being
    human than just being alive and that the key
    feature of humanity is rationality - this
    rationality may, in certain circumstances, be
    used to make a free choice to die.

35
  • PROPORTIONALISM
  • IN
  • EUTHANASIA

36
DANIEL C MAGUIRE
  • Maguire is a Catholic moral philosopher and he
    puts forward which is effectively a
    proportionists position. It holds that
  • 1) Life is a BASIC but not an absolute good
  • 2) ONE IS BOUND TO RESPECT LIFE, BUT NOONE IS
    BOUND TO PROLONG IT IN ALL CIRCUMSTANCES
  • Maguire argues that issues such as euthanasia can
    only be handled adequately within the broad
    context of a complete ethical theory. The special
    task of ethics is to bring sensitivity,
    reflection and method to the way people decide
    the sort of persons they ought to be and the sort
    of actions they ought to perform.
  • The first step is to discover the moral
    objective. This is done by asking
    reality-revealing questions such as what, why,
    how, who, where, when, what if and what else.
    Only when this is done can evaluations, using
    rational analysis, feelings, creative
    imagination, group experience be undertaken.

37
Maguires Central Questions
  • 1) Can it be moral and should it be legal to
    take direct action to terminate life in certain
    circumstances?. Maguire answers Yes.
  • (2) Must we in all cases await the good pleasure
    of biochemical and organic factors and allow
    these to determine the time and manner of death?
    Answer No
  • (3) Can the will of God regarding a person's
    death be manifested only through the collapse of
    sick or wounded organs? Answer No
  • (4) Can the will of God be discovered through
    human sensitivity and reasoning? Answer Yes.
  • (5) Could there be circumstances when it would
    be reasonable and therefore moral to terminate
    life through either positive action or calculated
    benign neglect? Answer Yes.

38
Deciding on death
  • Maguire rejects the idea of a kind of fatalistic
    theism which forbids expanding the human dominion
    over dying because the time of death is organised
    by God alone - this implies that human beings are
    Gods property.
  • If we should not intervene in nature then all
    medicine would be immoral, there is no essential
    difference between ending life and preserving
    life. Maguire maintains that we have
    underestimated our dominion over life and death -
    we have been given the responsibility to discover
    the good and choose it, even when the good in
    question is death.
  • Terminating a life under certain circumstances
    may be good so long as a greater good than
    physical life is being served. Maguire therefore
    challenges the 'absolute' and 'exceptionless'
    character often given to the principle "Thou
    shall not kill".

39
Maguires defence against attack!
  • Maguire defends his position of death by choice
    against the objections of the "no direct killing
    of innocent life" principle on the basis of his
    understanding of the source, function and limits
    of moral principles. The principle that there
    should be "No direct killing of innocent life" is
    valid most of the time, but in the specific
    circumstances of the patient's moral situation,
    the principle may not apply and would have to
    yield to the principle of achieving a good death.
  • Unless someone holds that continued living in any
    condition is always preferable, (s)he will have
    to enter into the weighing of proportional
    values. He accepts that making the judgement
    between conflicting values is not easy and it may
    be mistaken, but he maintains that the whole
    purpose of ethical reflection is to achieve a
    finer sensitivity to the values in conflict and
    make possible options less arbitrary. Therefore
    euthanasia can sometimes be a legitimate moral
    choice.

40
CHARLES E CURRAN
  • Curran accepts life as a primordial value he
    accepts the sanctity of life as a basic principle
    and respect for life as a moral imperative BUT he
    does not see euthanasia as the taking of full
    control if it only happens once the dying process
    has begun.
  • Curran emphasises relationships between persons
    and also responsibility so that direct taking of
    life may be allowed when the process of dying has
    begun. He therefore gives a qualified acceptance
    to euthanasia in limited circumstances. His is a
    more limited position than Maguire's.
  • The sanctity of life, the dignity of life, or the
    value of life, comes from "the special relation
    of the human being to the life-giving act of God
    and from the destiny of each person." The value
    of life is more than a persons achievements,
    possessions or capacities which contemporary
    society often counts as essential to the value of
    human life.

41
Life is not just a gift
  • Curran warns against too great a stress on life
    as a gift as this can play down the role and
    place of human responsibility in exercising
    self-determination and stewardship in a
    reasonable way.
  • 1. exercising stewardship does not exclude
    weighing the value of life against other values,
    such as cost, physical and mental suffering or
    freedom, and
  • 2. already implied in the Christian traditions
    acceptance of the distinction between ordinary
    and extraordinary means of treatment see
    separate paper on ordinary and extraordinary
    means.

42
  • UTILITARIANISM

43
EUTHANASIA AND UTILITARIANISM
  • Today utilitarianism is the ethical theory most
    often applied in practice if happiness is
    maximised, then an action is right.
  • On this basis, to help an old person to die when
    they are in great pain and terminally ill and
    they want their life to be brought to an end
    might be argued to be right as happiness is being
    increased and pain is being minimised.
  • The most common arguments in favour of euthanasia
    tend, therefore, to be utilitarian ones. However
    utilitarianism fails to make a distinctions
    between actions that are absolutely RIGHT or
    WRONG and if this distinction is accepted then it
    may be challenged as an ethical theory.

44
  • Underlying, therefore, different positions on
    euthanasia are different ethical frameworks and
    unless these framework assumptions are identified
    and the pre-suppositions on which they rest are
    analysed and questioned, the debate is not likely
    to make significant progress except at a level
    that may owe more to rhetoric than careful
    argument.
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