Debating euthanasia
(Print Material)
Author
Contributors
Published
Oxford, U.K. ; Hart, 2012.
Format
Print Material
ISBN
9781849461788 (pbk.), 1849461783 (pbk.)
Status
Description
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Copies
Location | Call Number | Status |
---|---|---|
University Hospital Limerick Regional | 344.04197 JAC | On Shelf |
More Details
Published
Oxford, U.K. ; Hart, 2012.
Physical Desc
x, 190 pages ; 22 cm.
Language
English
ISBN
9781849461788 (pbk.), 1849461783 (pbk.)
Notes
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (p. [175]-178) and index.
Description
"Emily Jackson argues that we owe it to everyone in society to do all that we can to ensure that they experience a 'good death'. For a small minority of patients who experience intolerable and unrelievable suffering, this may mean helping them to have an assisted death. In a liberal society, where people's moral views differ, we should not force individuals to experience deaths they find intolerable. This is not an argument in favour of dying. On the contrary, Jackson argues that legalisation could extend and enhance the lives of people whose present fear of the dying process causes them overwhelming distress. John Keown argues that voluntary euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide are gravely unethical and he defends their continued prohibition by law. He analyses the main arguments for relaxation of the law--including those which invoke the experience of jurisdictions which permit these practices--and finds them wanting. Relaxing the law would, he concludes, be both wrong in principle and dangerous in practice, not least for the dying, the disabled and the disadvantaged"--Provided by publisher.