Euthanasia, also mercy killing, practice of ending a life so as to release an individual
from an incurable disease or intolerable suffering. The term is sometimes used generally
to refer to an easy or painless death. Voluntary euthanasia involves a request by the
dying patient or that person's legal representative. Passive or negative euthanasia
involves not doing something to prevent death-that is, allowing someone to die; active or
positive euthanasia involves taking deliberate action to cause a death.
Euthanasia has been accepted both legally and morally in various forms in many societies.
In ancient Greece and Rome it was permissible in some situations to help others die.
With the rise of organized religion, euthanasia became morally and ethically abhorrent.
Christianity, Judaism, and Islam all hold human life sacred and condemn euthanasia in any
form.
Following traditional religious principles, Western laws have generally considered the
act of helping someone to die a form of homicide subject to legal sanctions. Even a
passive withholding of help to prevent death has frequently been severely punished.
Euthanasia, however, occurs secretly in all societies, including those in which it is
held to be immoral and illegal.
The Ethics of Euthanasia
Organizations supporting the legalization of voluntary euthanasia were established in
Great Britain in 1935 and in the United States in 1938. They have gained some public
support, but so far they have been unable to achieve their goal in either nation. In the
last few decades, Western laws against passive and voluntary euthanasia have slowly been
eased, although serious moral and legal questions still exist.
Critics point to the so-called euthanasia committees in Nazi Germany that were empowered
to condemn and execute anyone found to be a burden to the state. This instance of abuse
of the power of life and death has long served as a warning to some against allowing the
practice of euthanasia.
The proeuthanasia, or "right to die," movement has received considerable encouragement by
the passage of laws in 40 states by 1990, which allow legally competent individuals to
make "living wills." These wills empower and instruct doctors to withhold life-support
systems if the individuals become terminally ill.
Medical Ethics
The medical profession has generally been caught in the middle of the social
controversies that rage over euthanasia. Government and religious groups as well as the
medical profession itself agree that doctors are not required to use "extraordinary
means" to prolong the life of the terminally ill. What constitutes extraordinary means is
usually left to the discretion of the patient's family. Modern technological advances,
such as respirators and artificial kidney machines, have made it possible to keep persons
alive for long periods of time even when they are permanently unconscious or irrevocably
brain damaged. Proponents of euthanasia, however, believe that prolonging life in this
way may cause great suffering to the patient and the family. In addition, certain
life-support systems are so expensive that they cannot be provided for all potential
patients.
Some opponents of euthanasia have feared that the increasing success that doctors have
had in transplanting human organs might lead to abuse of the practice of euthanasia. It
is now generally understood, however, that physicians will not violate the rights of the
dying donor in order to help preserve the life of the organ recipient.
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