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EUTHANASIA. GREEK FOR “GOOD DEATH” PUTS INTO QUESTION THE VALUE OF LIFE. SANCTITY OF LIFE--CATHOLICISM END OF LIFE ISSUES, WHAT SORT OF DEATH SHOULD ONE HAVE? PAIN AND SUFFERING--PALLIATIVE CARE. DOES IT MAKE SENSE TO SAY A PERSON HAVE A RIGHT TO A GOOOD DEATH?. EUTHANASIA.
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EUTHANASIA • GREEK FOR “GOOD DEATH” • PUTS INTO QUESTION THE VALUE OF LIFE. • SANCTITY OF LIFE--CATHOLICISM • END OF LIFE ISSUES, WHAT SORT OF DEATH SHOULD ONE HAVE? • PAIN AND SUFFERING--PALLIATIVE CARE. • DOES IT MAKE SENSE TO SAY A PERSON HAVE A RIGHT TO A GOOOD DEATH?
EUTHANASIA • ISSUE OF DIGNITY OR DYING WITH DIGNITY (DEONTOLOGY) • ISSUES IN SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY. • PRACTICE OF MEDICINE: HIPPOCRATIC OATH
EUTHANASIA • BILL C-384, A PRIVATE MEMBERS BILL PRESENTED TO PARLIAMENT. • ENDORSED OR LEGALIZED PHYSICIAN ASSISTED SUICIDE. • MADE CONSENT MANDATORY AND ALLOWED PHYSICIANS TO AID A PERSON TO DIE WITH DIGNITY (TERMINAL ILLNESS AND WITHOUT PROSPECT OF RELIEF FROM PAIN)
EUTHANASIA • some distinctions: • voluntary euthanasia • involuntary euthanasia • active euthanasia • passive euthanasia
EUTHANASIA • voluntary passive euthanasia: allowing patient to die as wished. • involuntary active euthanasia: actively using substance to kill patient, end their life, without knowledge of their wishes. • involuntary passive: allowing them to dies without knowing their wishes. • voluntary active euthanasia: actively using means to end life as wished by subject.
EUTHANASIA • brock and callahan: good to compare and contrast their articles. • most important contrast: killing and allowing to die. • Brock: the distinction is problematic, confused. • callahan: the distinction is all important and clear.
EUTHANASIA • Brock and Callahan
EUTHANASIA • Brock and Callahan
EUTHANASIA • B AND C
EUTHANASIA • B AND C:
EUTHANASIA • B and C:
EUTHANASIA • B and C:
EUTHANASIA • B and C:
EUTHANASIA • C and B:
RODRIGUEZ CASE • ARGUED THAT S. 241 B OF THE CRIMINAL CODE PROHIBITING ASSISTANCE OF SUICIDE, VIOLATED HER RIGHTS AND SHOULD BE STRUCK DOWN. • CITED SECTION 7 OF CONSTITUTION: “EVERYONE HAS A RIGHT TO LIFE, LIBERTY, AND THE SECURITY OF PERSON AND THE RIGHT NOT BE DEPRIVED THEREOF EXCEPT IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE PRINCIPLES OF FUNDAMENTAL JUSTICE.”
RODRIGUEZ CASE • SOME HIGHLIGHTS: • LAMER: S. 241 B CREATES INEQUALITY; DISABLED PERSONS CANNOT ACCESS OPTION OF SUICIDE. IT IS DISCRIMINATORY. • BUT LAMER FINDS THIS SECTION IS JUSTIFIED BY PARLIAMENT’S OBJECTIVE, THAT OF PROTECTING VULNERABLE.
RODRIGUEZ CASE • “IT IS NECESSARY AND JUSTIFIABLE TO THWART THE SELF-DETERMINATION OF SOME PERSONS WITH PHYSICAL DISABILITIES IN ORDER TO ASSURE THE PROTECTION OF ALL THOSE WHO MANY BE VULNERABLE TO BEING PRESSURED OR COERCED INTO COMMITTING SUICIDE.”
RODRIGUEZ CASE • Lamer: slippery slope argument is possible. • decriminalization of assisted suicide could increase possibility of homicide of physically disabled. • but he does not buy the rationality of the legislation. • slippery slope cannot justify the exclusion of disabled from self-determination. • parliament is not justified in denying to the disabled the choice of ending life.
RODRIGUEZ CASE • sopinka: disagrees with lamer. • while s. 241 b may infringe right to security, it does so consistently with principles of fundamental justice. • infringement on rodriguez is minimal. • reluctant to recognize that law threatens values of life, liberty, etc. in S. 7 of charter.
RODRIGUEZ CASE • sopinka: charter asserts value of life, sanctity of life. So no merit to argument that there is in S. 7 an implied right to end one’s life. • while S. 241 b includes right over one’s body, depriving rodriguez this autonomy is justified under fundamental justice. • autonomy and risk of allowing it to be so expansive to include a danger to personhood.
RODRIGUEZ CASE • role of courts! • sopinka says proper role is not to legislate or make changes to legislative policy. • appeals to virtue ethics. s. 241 b is legitimate because parliament’s objective of preserving life is just. • while appellant (rodriguez) argues that principles of fundamental justice include human dignity and autonomy, he is not convinced.
RODRIGUEZ CASE • fundamental justice: • interests of state and individuals must be balanced and this is role of fundamental justice. • state: protect life and vulnerable. • Individual: have authority over life.
RODRIGUEZ CASE • sopinka cont. • no consensus on decriminalizing assisted suicide, unlike consensus against abortion law. • medical ethics: courts are right to recognize individual’s right to refuse treatment. • physicians: applied to them this should not lead us to change interpretation of homicide provision to permit p.a.s.
RODRIGUEZ CASE • sopinka identifies a dilemma: • physician in allowing patient to refuse treatment makes a decision akin to decision to perform active, voluntary euthanasia. • palliative care: he recognizes that palliative measures can lead to death. • intention differs though! why are they different? allowing death and causing death! issue of causation.
RODRIGUEZ CASE • physicians under guise of palliative care may commit euthanasia, he admits. • this does not amount to same thing. the act is not unjust, he admits. • role of intention: easing pain vs causing death. • in end, impairment of s. rodriguez’s right is minimal and justified. (utilitarianism)
RODRIGUEZ CASE • mclachlin: • argues case is not about discrimination but how far state may limit right of person over decision about their body and person. • denial of choice to rodriguez cannot be justified or saved under principle of fundamental justice. (identical to law against abortion)
RODRIGUEZ CASE • mclachlin: legislation is arbitrary limitation of self-determination. • legislature in decriminalizing suicide intended not to thwart self-determination. • hence, not consistent with this intent. • inconsistent view of culpability.
RODRIGUEZ CASE • culpability is not criminal in such assistance. • state has not shown that such a law has objective importance and outweighs individual liberty. • legislative intention is to prevent abuses, not preventing suicides. • state has not show abuses follow.
Keyserlingk and causality • rodriguez case ignores the complexity of criminal liability. • this is based on causality and the majority judgement confuses standard and empirical causality from normative (moral) causality. • criminal liability based on committing an act, not on failing or omitting to do something.
Keyserlingk and causality • empirical causality: 5 cases he raises, all indicate that cause of death is act of physician. • i.e. stopping respirator is an “empirical cause.”
Keyserlingk and causality • normative causality. does not distinguish acts from omissions. • Good samaritan laws: seinfeld episode. • sopinka’s admission: administering pain medication is the empirical cause of death. • legal issue: physician’s are relieved of criminal culpability only because they do not intend to commit an illegal act. • Kantian aspect: no purpose to act wrong.
Keyserlingk and causality • death is still caused. • implication: physician cannot be brought up on criminal charges, though s/he causes death. • if so, one can kill if intention is not unlawful, that is to break a law.
latimer case • Krutzen, Rudy. Argues that Latimer did right for right reasons. • Issue of Justice. was it done? • question of punishment only arises if what he did was in fact immoral, Rudy says. • no in-between! if immoral, deserves punishment, if not, does not deserve punishment. • Law must follow morality, not other way.
latimer case • Consent. how important is this issue? • pain. Was her pain pointless? no one would consent to be subjected to torture! • compassion as moral principle. Mercy. • real villains: the interest groups. • red herring of the charge: open hunting season on the disabled. Also slippery slope.
latimer case • need to draw the line. i.e. what constitutes quality of life? • quality of life is both objective and subjective. • role of emotions. jury is blameworthy. • misplaced compassion and duty. “If law is not changed, caregivers will continue to find themselves in guilt-ridden no-win situations.