Physician-Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia - Pro and Con

2040 Words5 Pages

Euthanasia - Pro and Con

Abstract

This paper will define Euthanasia and assisted suicide. Euthanasia is often

confused with and associated with assisted suicide, definitions of the two are

required. Two perspectives shall be presented in this paper. The first

perspective will favor euthanasia or the "right to die," the second perspective

will favor antieuthanasia, or the "right to live". Each perspective shall

endeavor to clarify the legal, moral and ethical ramifications or aspects of

euthanasia.

Thesis Statement

Euthanasia, also mercy killing, is the practice of ending a life so as to

release an individual from an incurable disease or intolerable suffering.

Euthanasia is a merciful means to and end of long-term suffering. Euthanasia is

a relatively new dilemma for the United States and has gained a bad reputation

from negative media hype surrounding assisted suicides. Euthanasia has a

purpose and should be evaluated as humanely filling a void created by our

sometimes inhumane modern society.

Antithesis Statement

Euthanasia is nothing less than cold-blooded killing. Euthanasia cheapens life,

even more so than the very divisive issue of abortion. Euthanasia is morally

and ethically wrong and should be banned in these United States. Modern

medicine has evolved by leaps and bounds recently, euthanasia resets these

medical advances back by years and reduces today's Medical Doctors to

administrators of death.

Euthanasia defined

The term Euthanasia is used generally to refer to an easy or painless

death. Voluntary euthanasia involves a request by the dying patient or that

person's legal representative. Passive or negative euthanasia involves not

doing something to prevent death-that is, allowing someone to die; active or

positive euthanasia involves taking deliberate action to cause a death.

Euthanasia is often mistaken or associated with for assisted suicide, a

distant cousin of euthanasia, in which a person wishes to commit suicide but

feels unable to perform the act alone because of a physical disability or lack

of knowledge about the most effective means. An individual who assists a

suicide victim in accomplishing that goal may or may not be held responsible for

the death, depending on local laws. There is a distinct difference between

euthanasia and assisted suicide. This paper targets euthanasia; pros and cons,

Open Document