withoutaface
Premium Member
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- Jul 14, 2004
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- 2004
Re: Should Euthanasia Be Legalised?
I feel I've covered all that needs to be said in the few paragraphs I've posted. In summary:
1. Yes, there is a chance of recovery, however if the person to be euthanased is informed of this and still decides they want to die because the chance is far too slim, then that's their prerogative. People will drive a car despite the consequences of being involved in a severe crash being of far greater magnitude than those of walking to work. The principle is the same, there's a <1% chance that their choice is horribly, horribly wrong, but they take a calculated risk and will usually come out on top.
2. The concept of ownership of one's body comes about because we have a few possibilities:
a) I own my body.
b) the government owns my body.
c) my body belongs to God.
Now I happen to believe the first one to be true, and logically we extend ownership to a dominion over the use of it. In other words, I'm allowed to reside in my house, I'm allowed to drive my car. But I'm also allowed to knock my house down and crush my car into a little cube. My body is just another piece of property, albeit the most important thing I own.
3. Arguments that my right to choose a painless death is nonexistent on the basis that millions of people starve every year are fallacious. Most of the world doesn't have the internet, therefore I shouldn't be allowed on the internet. Most of the world doesn't have a university education, therefore I shouldn't have a university education.
I feel I've covered all that needs to be said in the few paragraphs I've posted. In summary:
1. Yes, there is a chance of recovery, however if the person to be euthanased is informed of this and still decides they want to die because the chance is far too slim, then that's their prerogative. People will drive a car despite the consequences of being involved in a severe crash being of far greater magnitude than those of walking to work. The principle is the same, there's a <1% chance that their choice is horribly, horribly wrong, but they take a calculated risk and will usually come out on top.
2. The concept of ownership of one's body comes about because we have a few possibilities:
a) I own my body.
b) the government owns my body.
c) my body belongs to God.
Now I happen to believe the first one to be true, and logically we extend ownership to a dominion over the use of it. In other words, I'm allowed to reside in my house, I'm allowed to drive my car. But I'm also allowed to knock my house down and crush my car into a little cube. My body is just another piece of property, albeit the most important thing I own.
3. Arguments that my right to choose a painless death is nonexistent on the basis that millions of people starve every year are fallacious. Most of the world doesn't have the internet, therefore I shouldn't be allowed on the internet. Most of the world doesn't have a university education, therefore I shouldn't have a university education.