Examlex
James Rachels: Active and Passive Euthanasia
Active euthanasia is the intentional termination of a patient's life by another person, for the sake of relieving the pain and suffering of the patient. Passive euthanasia is the cessation of medical assistance needed to prolong a patient's life, again performed for the sake of relieving pain and suffering. The conventional doctrine in medical ethics is that whereas passive euthanasia is sometimes morally permissible, active euthanasia never is. Rachels argues that the conventional doctrine faces serious objections, and cannot be correct.
Rachels raises two objections to the conventional doctrine. The first is that the purpose of euthanasia is to alleviate pain and suffering, and in many cases active euthanasia can serve this function much more efficiently than passive euthanasia. Thus, if a decision has been made to employ euthanasia, active euthanasia is preferable to passive euthanasia. Rachels's second objection is that the conventional doctrine leads to decisions about life and death being made on morally irrelevant grounds. For example, passive euthanasia is sometimes employed on infants born with Down's syndrome who would require a simple surgery to survive. Such infants are allowed to die not because they require surgery, but because they have Down's syndrome. The decision to euthanize such infants depends on the irrelevant fact that they require a simple operation.
The acceptance of the conventional doctrine is often grounded in the view that killing is intrinsically worse than letting die. Against this, Rachels imagines two cases that are exactly alike in every respect, except that one involves killing and the other involves letting die. In the first case, Smith drowns his young cousin to gain his inheritance. In the second case, Jones, like Smith, intends to kill his young cousin, but ends up (because of a slippery bath tub) merely watching him drown. Rachels claims that the two men behave equally wrongly, and that this shows there is no morally relevant distinction between killing and letting die. The distinction between killing and letting die thus cannot be used to support the conventional doctrine
-Rachels claims that there is no moral difference between the consequences of active and passive euthanasia.
Percentage Of Increase
A measure expressed as a percentage that reflects the rise in value or quantity of something compared to its previous value.
Horizontal Analysis
A financial analysis technique that evaluates changes in financial statement line items over a series of reporting periods.
Vertical Analysis
A method in financial accounting where each entry in a financial statement is listed as a percentage of a base figure, facilitating the comparison of financial statements over different periods.
Accounts Receivable Turnover
A financial ratio that measures how efficiently a company collects revenue by comparing net credit sales to the average accounts receivable.
Q1: Thomson claims that even though you ought
Q2: According to Wolf-Devine, a person's gender and
Q8: According to Thomas, sometimes a minority professor
Q12: According to Crouch, public harassment is a
Q12: What effect does Singer think that the
Q15: According to Annas, becoming more fully virtuous
Q21: Wolf claims that ultimately, normative questions must
Q26: The control condition claims:<br>A) it is morally
Q31: According to Arpaly, a sorrowing philanthropist is
Q90: a management request for an operational audit