Arguments Against Active Euthanasia

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Within the medical community euthanasia is a controversial issue which arises when the death could be a viable and acceptable alternative to life. According to Medical News Today, euthanasia is defined as “a deliberate action with the express intention of ending a life to relieve intractable, persistent, and unstoppable suffering.” The practice has been deemed illegal in a variety of countries and states, but some people may sympathize with the patient’s desire to end suffering through death. With all the medical advances over time, society has been able to keep individuals biologically alive. Yet certain terminal diseases could cause so much suffering and pain that some people rather die instantly then wait to live for only a bit longer. A …show more content…

Rachels states “The maintenance of life by artificial means is, in such cases, sadly pointless.” (107). Even though such statement may seem blunt, he mentions how both science and religion could agree seeing how both the Pope and the American Medical Association don’t oppose letting people die as much as they oppose killing. Rachels begins to constructs the practical consequences of the traditional view by presenting the three options to physicians can perform when dealing with terminal ill suffering patients. First case involves active euthanasia in which the physician provides the means for the transition into death usually by a lethal injection. The second option involves passive euthanasia in which the physician stop treating the patient so the disease eventually kills the patient. The third option involves continuing to treat the patient in order to sustain life. Rachel may accept passive euthanasia as he states “But the view which makes option two the top choice is a 'moderate' position that incorporates the worst, and not the best, of both extremes” (Rachels, 108). Yet even though Rachels may accept the passive euthanasia rather than actively killing or prolonging a life of suffering, he argues how both are morally equivalent. Rachels uses Dr. Anthony Shaw as a supporter of his view. Dr. Shaw supports the morality of letting infants die. They rather accompany the dying in their final moments than be the cause for their death in active euthanasia or be the intervening individual prolonging a life of

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