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Moving from voluntary euthanasia to non-voluntary euthanasia: equality and compassion
journal contribution
posted on 2004-09-01, 00:00 authored by K Amarasekara, Mirko BagaricThe recent Dutch law legalising active voluntary euthanasia will reignite the euthanasia debate. An illuminating method for evaluating the moral status of a practice is to follow the implications of the practice to its logical conclusion. The argument for compassion is one of the central arguments in favour of voluntary active euthanasia. This argument applies perhaps even more forcefully in relation to incompetent patients. If active voluntary euthanasia is legalised, arguments based on compassion and equality will be directed towards legalising active non-voluntary euthanasia in order to make accelerated termination of death available also to the incompetent. The removal of discrimination against the incompetent has the potential to become as potent a catch-cry as the right to die. However, the legalisation of non-voluntary euthanasia is undesirable. A review of the relevant authorities reveals that there is no coherent and workable "best interests" test which can be invoked to decide whether an incompetent patient is better off dead. This provides a strong reason for not stepping onto the slippery path of permitting active voluntary euthanasia.
History
Journal
Ratio juris: an international journal of jurisprudence and philosophy of lawVolume
17Issue
3Pagination
398 - 423Publisher
Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Ltd.Location
Oxford, EnglandPublisher DOI
ISSN
0952-1917eISSN
1467-9337Language
engPublication classification
C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal; C Journal articleCopyright notice
2004, Blackwell Publishing LtdUsage metrics
Keywords
nature of lawlaw and moralityjusticerightness and natural lawlaw and reasonthe logic of normsrights validity and the legitimacy of lawthe rule of lawlegal reasoninginterpretationAiredale NHS Trust v. BlandAnalytical ApproachDeath and EuthanasiaInternational Covenant on Civil and Political RightsLegal ApproachLawPhilosophy