Richard A. Epstein’s Thinking the Unthinkable: Organ Sales

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Richard A. Epstein’s Thinking the Unthinkable: Organ Sales

Richard A. Epstein’s “Thinking the Unthinkable: Organ Sales” (2005) is an argument trying to convince people that selling human organs is acceptable in order to increase the availability for those in need of an organ transplant. Epstein says money will motivate more people to donate their organs to those in need. He also looks at the argument from the point of the recipient of the organ and argues that the expense of buying an organ will not increase the price of getting an organ transplant.

Obviously, people who are rich already have an easier time getting an organ transplant. The rich can more easily afford the costs; the poor will not have any more of a cost disadvantage than they already have. Epstein gives these reasons to support his idea that selling organs is not immoral. He does not accurately consider the immoral consequences of allowing organ sales by law. Compensating people for a good deed that is supposed to be selfless will completely change the nature of the action and the motivation behind it. Using money as motivation can be dangerous because of the manner in which harvesting the organ may occur and because of who may be reaping the benefit of the organ sale. Someone could use violence or could misuse their judgment to obtain the money from the organs of another person. Organs should only be allowed to be donated, not sold. Traditionally, donating organs is an act of giving in order to save someone else’s life; it allows a person to be a Good Samaritan. Willingly donating an organ keeps the focus on giving to others, instead of using a motivator that can corrupt, such as money.

The first important minor claim Epstein makes in supp...

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...would be better for all humans.

References

Myths and facts about organ and tissue donation. Donate life: make organ & tissue

donation your way of life. (2003, June 9). Retrieved April 10, 2005. <http://www.

organdonor.gov/myths_and_facts.htm>

Donation & transplantation. (2003). The organ procurement and transplantation

network. Retrieved April 10, 2005. <http://www.optn.org/about/donation/

whoCanBeADonor.asp>

Epstein, R. A. (2005). Thinking the unthinkable: organ sales. In Barnet S., & Bedau

H. Current issues and enduring questions: a guide to critical thinking and

argument, with readings. (pp. 102-105). Boston: Bedford/St. Martin’s.

Transplant resource guide. (2002). Transplant awareness. Retrieved April 10, 2005.

< http://www.transplantawareness.org/resguide/chap19.htm>

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