Bioethics
Euthanasia
quick ideas about euthanasia. What is euthanasia? Would it be acceptable in any case? Why is euthanasia wrong?
A. Why is euthanasia wrong?
1. What is euthanasia?
We call euthanasia the act of deliberately causing the death of a sick person because they are terminally ill or have a condition that is difficult to bear. Is it correct to kill someone who asks for it or is in a serious medical situation? We know well that one must not kill anyone, but in complex cases doubt may arise and it is worth studying the subject.
2. Why is homicide wrong?
(We speak now of ordinary homicide, not euthanasia.) There are several reasons not to kill a human being, just as we do not want to be killed ourselves:
- Human dignity calls for special respect toward human beings.
- Within ourselves we know we must not do it: human nature demands it, and our conscience grasps this requirement (natural law).
- The Creator of man has expressly forbidden it: "You shall not kill" (commandments).
3. Why is suicide wrong?
(We speak of ordinary suicide, not euthanasia.) Here too there are several reasons, which coincide with the previous ones.
4. Why is euthanasia wrong?
Euthanasia is wrong for those same reasons: human dignity, natural law and the Creator's commandment. No one must be killed.
5. Does anyone desire euthanasia?
Normally nobody desires euthanasia. It is only proposed in exceptional cases, such as a troublesome and incurable illness. For example, certain paralyses, neuronal damage, advanced Alzheimer's, comatose states, severe depressions... In these cases euthanasia is still not correct, but doubts arise.
6. Can euthanasia be applied in these cases?
No, no. To understand this, it may be enough to think about the question of time: if instead of being incurable, it were an illness lasting a week or a month, would euthanasia be correct?... And if instead of a month, it took a year or three to recover?... And if it were eight or fifteen years?... And if health returned after 30 or 40 years?... And if after fifty years the person recovered, would it be right to kill them now?... And if after a few years doctors discovered an antidote, a prosthetic, or a new computer technique?... In short, a circumstance of time does not legitimize murder.
7. But the duration of illness sounds important
- The duration of an illness requires endurance, patience and capacity for sacrifice that increase as the situation is prolonged. For this reason, time makes an illness more burdensome. But the fact that it is hard to endure does not allow suppressing one's own life or that of another.
8. What if it is incurable?
The word incurable sounds much more painful than fifty years, although often death arrives naturally before that time of suffering. The word incurable suppresses hope and then suffering loses meaning, and one even thinks of euthanasia.
9. What meaning does suffering have?
10. Do I do what I want with my life?
11. What if that person is useless and a burden to others?
That would be an interesting idea for killing some politicians and mothers-in-law. But it is not right.
12. Other matters
- A dignified death, palliative care and therapeutic obstinacy are broad topics that we can summarize as follows:
- It is necessary to employ ordinary means for the care of the sick person, but extraordinary means are not obligatory. This does not mean euthanasia but acceptance of a death that cannot be avoided.
- It is good to palliate pain, proportionally to the situation.
- No one should be deprived of consciousness without their consent. Before doing so, it is advisable that they have received spiritual care and have fixed their final wishes, testament, etc.