Home » Downloads » Why is active euthanasia preferable to passive euthanasia in cases such as a patient

Why is active euthanasia preferable to passive euthanasia in cases such as a patient

Why is active euthanasia preferable to passive euthanasia in cases such as a patient

Read Active and Passive Euthnasia http://www2.sunysuffolk.edu/pecorip/scccweb/etexts/deathanddying_text/Active%20and%20Passive%20Euthanasia.pdf

and answer the following questions:

Why is active euthanasia preferable to passive euthanasia in cases such as a patient dying from an extremely painful and incurable cancer of the throat?

How does the conventional moral doctrine of allowing passive euthanasia and prohibiting active euthanasia lead people to make decisions concerning life and death on irrelevant grounds?

What conclusion about the moral difference between killing and letting die follows from the parallel examples of Smith and his six-year old cousin, and Jones and his six-year-old cousin?

Why is it a mistake to claim that passive euthanasia is not the intentional termination of life?

Why is it false to say that in passive euthanasia the doctor does not, in a moral sense, do anything?

Is there a moral distinction between giving someone the means to end their own life, and you ending it for them (at their request)? Legally there is, but is the distinction defensible ethically?

 

 

……………………….Answer preview…………………….

Why is active euthanasia preferable to passive euthanasia in cases such as a patient dying from an extremely painful and incurable cancer of the throat?

In a case of a patient in extreme pain and suffering incurable cancer of the throat, active euthanasia is preferred to passive euthanasia……………………………. 

APA

684 words

Get instant access to the full solution from yourhomeworksolutions by clicking the purchase button below

Accounting

Applied Sciences

Article Writing

Astronomy

Biology

Business

Calculus

Chemistry

Communications

Computer Science

Counselling

Criminology

Economics

Education

Engineering

English

Environmental

Ethics

Film

Food and Nutrition

Geography

Healthcare

History and Government

Human Resource Managment

Information Systems

Law

Literature

Management

Marketing

Mathematics

Nursing

Philospphy

Physics

Political Science

Psychology

Religion

Sociology

Statistics

Writing

Terms of service

Contact