Ethical Arguments Against Euthanasia Essay

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Thousands of people nationwide suffer with a terminal disease that inevitably will end their life. Many live day by day in unremitting pain with fear, aware that because of their illness they soon will take their last breathe. A sum of these people/patients ask for the choice to avoid death from their disease and instead choose when to go on their own terms and in peace with the help of their physicians before the disease takes them.This choice is called assisted suicide, it is a form of euthanasia, a procedure by which a physician provides the means for death, most often with a prescription or through lethal medication. It is a very controversial topic and many issues arise with it, some including ethical debates, as many who don’t agree …show more content…

It's is a century old debate on a person’s “right to die,” and death with dignity.

Ethics: Nearly in any situation involving a human life and deciding their death, there will be competing ethical ideas about how or if that decision should be made. For example, the view or idea of vitalism, which argues that human life is an absolute value and that it should be maintained whenever possible, no matter the circumstances (Croft 2009). Another thing would be the “Sanctity of Life,” which is largely focused and founded on religious views but that has been interpreted in many modern societies and is believed that a person should never intentionally end their life or that no person should ever intentionally end the life of another person, that is a doctor or physician should not, by request, be able to end the life of a patient (Ahsan 1996). Many who oppose Euthanasia or physician assisted suicide largely argue that “there is no life that is not worth living” and that respect for life is a foundational value of all societies, and having dignity requires that we do not intentionally kill another human being or

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