{"id":174772,"date":"2016-12-22T13:17:02","date_gmt":"2016-12-22T18:17:02","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/taking-life-humans-by-peter-singer-utilitarian\/"},"modified":"2016-12-22T13:17:02","modified_gmt":"2016-12-22T18:17:02","slug":"taking-life-humans-by-peter-singer-utilitarian","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/euthanasia\/taking-life-humans-by-peter-singer-utilitarian\/","title":{"rendered":"Taking Life: Humans, by Peter Singer &#8211; Utilitarian"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>          In dealing with an objection to the view of abortion          presented in Chapter 6, we have already looked beyond          abortion to infanticide. In so doing we will have          confirmed the suspicion of supporters of the sanctity of          human life that once abortion is accepted, euthanasia          lurks around the next comer - and for them, euthanasia is          an unequivocal evil. It has, they point out, been          rejected by doctors since the fifth century B.C., when          physicians first took the Oath of Hippocrates and swore          'to give no deadly medicine to anyone if asked, nor          suggest any such counsel'. Moreover, they argue, the Nazi          extermination programme is a recent and terrible example          of what can happen once we give the state the power to MI          innocent human beings.        <\/p>\n<p>          I do not deny that if one accepts abortion on the grounds          provided in Chapter 6, the case for killing other human          beings, in certain circumstances, is strong. As I shall          try to show in this chapter, however, this is not          something to be regarded with horror, and the use of the          Nazi analogy is utterly misleading. On the contrary, once          we abandon those doctrines about the sanctity of human          life that - as we saw in Chapter 4 - collapse as soon as          they are questioned, it is the refusal to accept killing          that, in some cases, is horrific.        <\/p>\n<p>          'Euthanasia' means, according to the dictionary, 'a          gentle and easy death', but it is now used to refer to          the killing of those who are incurably ill and in great          pain or distress, for the sake of those killed, and in          order to spare them further suffering or distress. This          is the main topic of this chapter. I shall also consider,          however, some cases in which, though killing is not          contrary to the wishes of the human who is killed, it is          also not carried out specifically for the sake of that          being. As we shall see, some cases involving newborn          infants fall into this category. Such cases may not be          'euthanasia' within the strict meaning of the term, but          they can usefully be included within the same general          discussion, as long as we are clear about the relevant          differences.        <\/p>\n<p>          Within the usual definition of euthanasia there are three          different types, each of which raises distinctive ethical          issues. it will help our discussion if we begin by          setting out this threefold distinction and then assess          the justifiability of each type.        <\/p>\n<p>          TYPES OF EUTHANASIA<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>          Most of the groups currently campaigning for changes in          the law to allow euthanasia are campaigning for voluntary          euthanasia - that is, euthanasia carried out at the          request of the person killed.        <\/p>\n<p>          Sometimes voluntary euthanasia is scarcely          distinguishable from assisted suicide. In Jean's Way,          Derek Humphry has told how his wife Jean, when dying of          cancer, asked him to provide her with the means to end          her life swiftly and without pain. They had seen the          situation coming and discussed it beforehand. Derek          obtained some tablets and gave them to Jean, who took          them and died soon afterwards.        <\/p>\n<p>          Dr Jack Kevorkian, a Michigan pathologist, went one step          further when he built a 'suicide machine' to help          terminally ill people commit suicide. His machine          consisted of a metal pole with three different bottles          attached to a tube of the kind used to provide an          intravenous drip. The doctor inserts the tube in the          patient's vein, but at this stage only a harmless saline          solution can pass through it. The patient may then flip a          switch, which will allow a coma-inducing drug to come          through the tube; this is automatically followed by a          lethal drug contained in the third bottle. Dr Kevorkian          announced that he was pre- pared to make the machine          available to any terminally ill patient who wished to use          it. (Assisting suicide is not against the law in          Michigan.) In June 1990, Janet Adkins, who was suffering          from Alzheimer's disease, but still competent to make the          decision to end her life, contacted Dr Kevorkian and told          him of her wish to die, rather than go through the slow          and progressive deterioration that the disease involves.          Dr Kevorkian was in attendance while she made use of his          machine, and then re- ported Janet Adkins's death to the          police. He was subsequently charged with murder, but the          judge refused to allow the charge to proceed to trial, on          the grounds that Janet Adkins had caused her own death.          The following year Dr Kevorkian made his device available          to two other people, who used it in order to end their          lives.        <\/p>\n<p>          In other cases, people wanting to die may be unable to          kill themselves. In 1973 George Zygmaniak was injured in          a motorcycle accident near his home in New Jersey. He was          taken to hospital, where he was found to be totally          paralysed from the neck down. He was also in considerable          pain. He told his doctor and his brother, Lester, that he          did not want to live in this condition. He begged them          both to kill him. Lester questioned the doctor and          hospital staff about George's prospects of recovery: he          was told that they were nil. He then smuggled a gun into          the hospital, and said to his brother: 'I am here to end          your pain, George. Is it all right with you?' George, who          was now unable to speak because of an operation to assist          his breathing, nodded affirmatively. Lester shot him          through the temple.        <\/p>\n<p>          The Zygmaniak case appears to be a clear instance of          voluntary euthanasia, although without some of the          procedural safeguards that advocates of the legalisation          of voluntary euthanasia propose. For instance, medical          opinions about the patient's prospects of recovery were          obtained only in an informal manner. Nor was there a          careful attempt to establish, before independent          witnesses, that George's desire for death was of a fixed          and rational kind, based on the best available          information about his situation. The killing was not          carried out by a doctor. An injection would have been          less distressing to others than shooting. But these          choices were not open to Lester Zygrnaniak, for the law          in New Jersey, as in most other places, regards mercy          killing as murder, and if he had made his plans known, he          would not have been able to carry them out.        <\/p>\n<p>          Euthanasia can be voluntary even if a person is not able,          as Jean Humphry, Janet Adkins, and George Zygmaniak were          able, to indicate the wish to die right up to the moment          the tablets are swallowed, the switch thrown, or the          trigger pulled. A person may, while in good health, make          a written request for euthanasia if, through accident or          illness, she should come to be incapable of making or          expressing a decision to die, in pain, or without the use          of her mental faculties, and there is no reasonable hope          of recovery. In killing a person who has made such a          request, who has re-affirmed it from time to time, and          who is now in one of the states described, one could          truly claim to be acting with her consent.        <\/p>\n<p>          There is now one country in which doctors can openly help          their patients to die in a peaceful and dignified way. In          the Netherlands, a series of court cases during the 1980s          upheld a doctor's right to assist a patient to die, even          if that assistance amounted to giving the patient a          lethal injection. Doctors in the Netherlands who comply          with certain guidelines (which will be described later in          this chapter) can now quite openly carry out euthanasia          and can report this on the death certificate with- out          fear of prosecution. It has been estimated that about          2,300 deaths each year result from euthanasia carried out          in this way.        <\/p>\n<p>          Involuntary Euthanasia        <\/p>\n<p>          I shall regard euthanasia as involuntary when the person          killed is capable of consenting to her own death, but          does not do so, either because she is not asked, or          because she is asked and chooses to go on living.          Admittedly this definition lumps two different cases          under one heading. There is a significant difference          between killing someone who chooses to go on living and          killing someone who has not consented to being killed,          but if asked, would have consented. In practice, though,          it is hard to imagine cases in which a person is capable          of consenting and would have consented if asked, but was          not asked. For why not ask? Only in the most bizarre          situations could one conceive of a reason for not          obtaining the consent of a person both able and willing          to consent.        <\/p>\n<p>          Killing someone who has not consented to being killed can          properly be regarded as euthanasia only when the motive          for killing is the desire to prevent unbearable suffering          on the part of the person killed. It is, of course, odd          that anyone acting from this motive should disregard the          wishes of the person for whose sake the action is done.          Genuine cases of involuntary euthanasia appear to be very          rare.        <\/p>\n<p>          Non-voluntary Euthanasia        <\/p>\n<p>          These two definitions leave room for a third kind of          euthanasia. If a human being is not capable of          understanding the choice between life and death,          euthanasia would be neither voluntary nor involuntary,          but non-voluntary. Those unable to give con- sent would          include incurably ill or severely disabled infants, and          people who through accident, illness, or old age have          permanently lost the capacity to understand the issue          involved, with- out having previously requested or          rejected euthanasia in these circumstances.        <\/p>\n<p>          Several cases of non-voluntary euthanasia have reached          the courts and the popular press. Here is one example.          Louis Repouille had a son who was described as 'incurably          imbecile', had been bed-ridden since infancy and blind          for five years. According to Repouille: 'He was just like          dead all the time.... He couldn't walk, he couldn't talk,          he couldn't do anything.' in the end Repouille killed his          son with chloroform.        <\/p>\n<p>          In 1988 a case arose that well illustrates the way in          which modern medical technology forces us to make life          and death decisions. Samuel Linares, an infant, swallowed          a small object that stuck in his windpipe, causing a loss          of oxygen to the brain. He was admitted to a Chicago          hospital in a coma and placed on a respirator. Eight          months later he was still comatose, still on the          respirator, and the hospital was planning to move Samuel          to a long-term care unit. Shortly before the move,          Samuel's parents visited him in the hospital. His mother          left the room, while his father produced a pistol and          told the nurse to keep away. He then disconnected Samuel          from the respirator, and cradled the baby in his arms          until he died. When he was sure Samuel was dead, he gave          up his pistol and surrendered to police. He was charged          with murder, but the grand jury refused to issue a          homicide indictment, and he subsequently received a          suspended sentence on a minor charge arising from the use          of the pistol.          Obviously, such cases raise different issues from those          raised by voluntary euthanasia. There is no desire to die          on the part of the infant. It may also be questioned          whether, in such cases, the death is carried out for the          sake of the infant, or for the sake of the family as a          whole. If Louis Repouille's son was 'just like dead all          the time', then he may have been so profoundly brain-          damaged that he was not capable of suffering at all. That          is also likely to have been true of the comatose Samuel          Linares. In that case, while caring for him would have          been a great and no doubt futile burden for the family,          and in the Linares case, a drain on the state's limited          medical resources as well, the infants were not          suffering, and death could not be said to be in, or          contrary to, their interests. It is therefore not          euthanasia, strictly speaking, as I have defined the          term. it might nevertheless be a justifiable ending of a          human life.        <\/p>\n<p>          Since cases of infanticide and non-voluntary euthanasia          are the kind of case most nearly akin to our previous          discussions of the status of animals and the human fetus,          we shall consider them first.        <\/p>\n<p>          JUSTIFYING INFANTICIDE AND NON-VOLUNTARY          EUTHANASIA        <\/p>\n<p>          As we have seen, euthanasia is non-voluntary when the          subject has never had the capacity to choose to live or          die. This is the situation of the severely disabled          infant or the older human being who has been profoundly          intellectually disabled since birth. Euthanasia or other          forms of killing are also non- voluntary when the subject          is not now but once was capable of making the crucial          choice, and did not then express any preference relevant          to her present condition.        <\/p>\n<p>          The case of someone who has never been capable of          choosing to live or die is a little more straightforward          than that of a person who had, but has now lost, the          capacity to make such a decision. We shall, once again,          separate the two cases and take the more straightforward          one first. For simplicity, I shall concentrate on          infants, although everything I say about them would apply          to older children or adults whose mental age is and has          always been that of an infant.        <\/p>\n<p>          Life and Death Decisions for Disabled Infants        <\/p>\n<p>          If we were to approach the issue of life or death for a          seriously disabled human infant without any prior          discussion of the ethics of killing in general, we might          be unable to resolve the conflict between the widely          accepted obligation to protect the sanctity of human          life, and the goal of reducing suffering. Some say that          such decisions are 'subjective', or that life and death          questions must be left to God and Nature. Our previous          discussions have, however, prepared the ground, and the          principles established and applied in the preceding three          chapters make the issue much less baffling than most take          it to be.        <\/p>\n<p>          In Chapter 4 we saw that the fact that a being is a human          being, in the sense of a member of the species Homo          sapiens, is not relevant to the wrongness of killing it;          it is, rather, characteristics like rationality,          autonomy, and self-consciousness that make a difference.          Infants lack these characteristics. Killing them,          therefore, cannot be equated with killing normal human          beings, or any other self-conscious beings. This          conclusion is not limited to infants who, because of          irreversible intellectual disabilities, will never be          rational, self-conscious beings. We saw in our discussion          of abortion that the potential of a fetus to become a          rational, self-conscious being cannot count against          killing it at a stage when it lacks these characteristics          - not, that is, unless we are also prepared to count the          value of rational self-conscious life as a reason against          contraception and celibacy. No infant - disabled or not -          has as strong a claim to life as beings capable of seeing          themselves as distinct entities, existing over time.        <\/p>\n<p>          The difference between killing disabled and normal          infants lies not in any supposed right to life that the          latter has and the former lacks, but in other          considerations about killing. Most obviously there is the          difference that often exists in the attitudes of the          parents. The birth of a child is usually a happy event          for the parents. They have, nowadays, often planned for          the child. The mother has carried it for nine months.          From birth, a natural affection begins to bind the          parents to it. So one important reason why it is normally          a terrible thing to kill an infant is the effect the          killing will have on its parents.        <\/p>\n<p>          It is different when the infant is born with a serious          disability. Birth abnormalities vary, of course. Some are          trivial and have little effect on the child or its          parents; but others turn the normally joyful event of          birth into a threat to the happiness of the parents, and          any other children they may have.        <\/p>\n<p>          Parents may, with good reason, regret that a disabled          child was ever born. In that event the effect that the          death of the child will have on its parents can be a          reason for, rather than against killing it. Some parents          want even the most gravely disabled infant to live as          long as possible, and this desire would then be a reason          against killing the infant. But what if this is not the          case? in the discussion that follows I shall assume that          the parents do not want the disabled child to live. I          shall also assume that the disability is so serious that          - again in contrast to the situation of an unwanted but          normal child today - there are no other couples keen to          adopt the infant. This is a realistic assumption even in          a society in which there is a long waiting- list of          couples wishing to adopt normal babies. It is true that          from time to time cases of infants who are severely          disabled and are being allowed to die have reached the          courts in a glare of publicity, and this has led to          couples offering to adopt the child. Unfortunately such          offers are the product of the highly publicised dramatic          life-and-death situation, and do not extend to the less          publicised but far more cormnon situations in which          parents feel themselves unable to look after a severely          disabled child, and the child then languishes in an          institution.        <\/p>\n<p>          Infants are sentient beings who are neither rational nor          self- conscious. So if we turn to consider the infants in          themselves, independently of the attitudes of their          parents, since their species is not relevant to their          moral status, the principles that govern the wrongness of          killing non-human animals who are sentient but not          rational or self-conscious must apply here too. As we          saw, the most plausible arguments for attributing a right          to life to a being apply only if there is some awareness          of oneself as a being existing over time, or as a          continuing mental self. Nor can respect for autonomy          apply where there is no capacity for autonomy. The          remaining principles identified in Chapter 4 are          utilitarian. Hence the quality of life that the infant          can be expected to have is important.        <\/p>\n<p>          One relatively common birth disability is a faulty          development of the spine known as spina bifida. Its          prevalence, varies in different countries, but it can          affect as many as one in five hundred live births. In the          more severe cases, the child will be permanently          paralysed from the waistdown and lack control of bowels          or bladder. Often excess fluid accumulates in the brain,          a condition known as hydrocephalus, which can result in          intellectual disabilities. Though some forms of treatment          exist, if the child is badly affected at birth, the          paralysis, incontinence, and intellectual disability          cannot be overcome.        <\/p>\n<p>          Some doctors closely connected with children suffering          from severe spina bifida believe that the lives of the          worst affected children are so miserable that it is wrong          to resort to surgery to keep them alive. Published          descriptions of the lives of these children support the          judgment that these worst affected children will have          lives filled with pain and discomfort. They need repeated          major surgery to prevent curvature of the spine, due to          the paralysis, and to correct other abnormalities. Some          children with spina bifida have had forty major          operations before they reach their teenage years.        <\/p>\n<p>          When the life of an infant will be so miserable as not to          be worth living, from the internal perspective of the          being who will lead that life, both the 'prior existence'          and the 'total' version of utilitarianism entail that, if          there are no 'extrinsic' reasons for keeping the infant          alive - like the feelings of the parents - it is better          that the child should be helped to die without further          suffering. A more difficult problem arises - and the          convergence between the two views ends - when we consider          disabilities that make the child's life prospects          significantly less promising than those of a normal          child, but not so bleak as to make the child's life not          worth living. Haemophilia is probably in this category.          The haemophiliac lacks the element in normal blood that          makes it clot and thus risks prolonged bleeding,          especially internal bleeding, from the slightest injury.          if allowed to continue, this bleeding leads to permanent          crippling and eventually death. The bleeding is very          painful and although improved treatments have eliminated          the need for constant blood transfusions, haemophiliacs          still have to spend a lot of time in hospital. They are          unable to play most sports and live constantly on the          edge of crisis. Nevertheless, haemophiliacs do not appear          to spend their time wondering whether to end it all; most          find life definitely worth living, despite the          difficulties they face.        <\/p>\n<p>          Given these facts, suppose that a newborn baby is          diagnosed as a haemophiliac. The parents, daunted by the          prospect of bringing up a child with this condition, are          not anxious for him to live. Could euthanasia be defended          here? Our first reaction may well be a firm 'no', for the          infant can be expected to have a life that is worth          living, even if not quite as good as that of a normal          baby. The 'prior existence' version of utilitarianism          sup- ports this judgment. The infant exists. His life can          be expected to contain a positive balance of happiness          over misery. To kill him would deprive him of this          positive balance of happiness. Therefore it would be          wrong.        <\/p>\n<p>          On the 'total' version of utilitarianism, however, we          cannot reach a decision on the basis of this information          alone. The total view makes it necessary to ask whether          the death of the haemophiliac infant would lead to the          creation of another being who would not otherwise have          existed. In other words, if the haemophiliac child is          killed, will his parents have another child whom they          would not have if the haemophiliac child lives? If they          would, is the second child likely to have a better life          than the one killed?        <\/p>\n<p>          Often it will be possible to answer both these questions          affinnatively. A woman may plan to have two children. If          one dies while she is of child-bearing age, she may          conceive another in its place. Suppose a woman planning          to have two children has one normal child, and then gives          birth to a haemophiliac child. The burden of caring for          that child may make it impossible for her to cope with a          third child; but if the disabled child were to die, she          would have another. It is also plausible to suppose that          the prospects of a happy life are better for a normal          child than for a haemophiliac.        <\/p>\n<p>          When the death of a disabled infant will lead to the          birth of another infant with better prospects of a happy          life, the total amount of happiness will be greater if          the disabled infant is killed. The loss of happy life for          the first infant is outweighed by the gain of a happier          life for the second. Therefore, if killing the          haemophiliac infant has no adverse effect on others, it          would, according to the total view, be right to kill him.        <\/p>\n<p>          The total view treats infants as replaceable, in much the          same way as it treats non-self-conscious animals (as we          saw in Chapter 5). Many will think that the          replaceability argument cannot be applied to human          infants. The direct killing of even the most hopelessly          disabled infant is still officially regarded as murder;          how then could the killing of infants with far less          serious problems, like haernophilia, be accepted? Yet on          further reflection, the implications of the          replaceability argument do not seem quite so bizarre. For          there are disabled members of our species whom we now          deal with exactly as the argument suggests we should.          These cases closely resemble the ones we have been          discussing. There is only one difference, and that is a          difference of timing - the timing of the discovery of the          problem, and the consequent killing of the disabled          being.        <\/p>\n<p>          Prenatal diagnosis is now a routine procedure for          pregnant women. There are various medical techniques for          obtaining information about the fetus during the early          months of pregnancy. At one stage in the development of          these procedures, it was possible to discover the sex of          the fetus, but not whether the fetus would suffer from          haemophilia. Haemophilia is a sex- linked genetic defect,          from which only males suffer; females can carry the gene          and pass it on to their male offspring without themselves          being affected. So a woman who knew that she carried the          gene for haemophilia could, at that stage, avoid giving          birth to a haemophiliac child only by finding out the sex          of the fetus, and aborting all males fetuses.          Statistically, only half of these male children of women          who carried the defective gene would have suffered from          haernophilia, but there was then no way to find out to          which half a particular fetus belonged. Therefore twice          as many fetuses were being killed as necessary, in order          to avoid the birth of children with haemophilia. This          practice was widespread in many countries, and yet did          not cause any great outcry. Now that we have techniques          for identifying haemophilia before birth, we can be more          selective, but the principle is the same: women are          offered, and usually accept, abortions in order to avoid          giving birth to children with haemophilia.        <\/p>\n<p>          The same can be said about some other conditions that can          be detected before birth. Down's syndrome, formerly known          as mongolism, is one of these. Children with this          condition have intellectual disabilities and most will          never be able to live in- dependently, but their lives,          like those of small children, can be joyful. The risk of          having a Down's syndrome child increases sharply with the          age of the mother, and for this reason prenatal diagnosis          is routinely offered to pregnant women over 35. Again,          undergoing the procedure implies that if the test for          Down's syndrome is positive, the woman will consider          aborting the fetus and, if she still wishes to have          another child, will start another pregnancy, which has a          good chance of being normal.        <\/p>\n<p>          Prenatal diagnosis, followed by abortion in selected          cases, is common practice in countries with liberal          abortion laws and advanced medical techniques. I think          this is as it should be. As the arguments of Chapter 6          indicate, I believe that abortion can be justified. Note,          however, that neither haemophilia nor Down's syndrome is          so crippling as to make life not worth living, from the          inner perspective of the person with the condition. To          abort a fetus with one of these disabilities, intending          to have another child who will not be disabled, is to          treat fetuses as interchangeable or replaceable. If the          mother has previously decided to have a certain number of          children, say two, then what she is doing, in effect, is          rejecting one potential child in favour of another. She          could, in defence of her actions, say: the loss of life          of the aborted fetus is outweighed by the gain of a          better life for the normal child who will be conceived          only if the disabled one dies.        <\/p>\n<p>          When death occurs before birth, replaceability does not          conflict with generally accepted moral convictions. That          a fetus is known to be disabled is widely accepted as a          ground for abortion. Yet in discussing abortion, we saw          that birth does not mark a morally significant dividing          line. I cannot see how one could defend the view that          fetuses may be 'replaced' before birth, but newborn          infants may not be. Nor is there any other point, such as          viability, that does a better job of dividing the fetus          from the infant. Self-consciousness, which could provide          a basis for holding that it is wrong to kill one being          and replace it with another, is not to be found in either          the fetus or the newborn infant. Neither the fetus nor          the newborn infant is an individual capable of regarding          itself as a distinct entity with a life of its own to          lead, and it is only for newborn infants, or for still          earlier stages of human life, that replaceability should          be considered to be an ethically acceptable option.        <\/p>\n<p>          It may still be objected that to replace either a fetus          or a newborn infant is wrong because it suggests to          disabled people living today that their lives are less          worth living than the lives of people who are not          disabled. Yet it is surely flying in the face of reality          to deny that, on average, this is so. That is the only          way to make sense of actions that we all take for          granted. Recall thalidomide: this drug, when taken by          pregnant women, caused many children to be born without          arms or legs. Once the cause of the abnormal births was          discovered, the drug was taken off the market, and the          company responsible had to pay compensation. If we really          believed that there is no reason to think of the life of          a disabled person as likely to be any worse than that of          a normal person, we would not have regarded this as a          tragedy. No compensation would have been sought, or          awarded by the courts. The children would merely have          been 'different'. We could even have left the drug on the          market, so that women who found it a useful sleeping pill          during pregnancy could continue to take it. If this          sounds grotesque, that is only because we are all in no          doubt at all that it is better to be born with limbs than          without them. To believe this involves no disrespect at          all for those who are lacking limbs; it simply recognises          the reality of the difficulties they face.        <\/p>\n<p>          In any case, the position taken here does not imply that          it would be better that no people born with severe          disabilities should survive; it implies only that the          parents of such infants should be able to make this          decision. Nor does this imply lack of respect or equal          consideration for people with disabilities who are now          living their own lives in accordance with their own          wishes. As we saw at the end of Chapter 2, the principle          of equal consideration of interests rejects any          discounting of the interests of people on grounds of          disability.        <\/p>\n<p>          Even those who reject abortion and the idea that the          fetus is replaceable are likely to regard possible people          as replaceable. Recall the second woman in Parfit's case          of the two women, described in Chapter 5. She was told by          her doctor that if she went ahead with her plan to become          pregnant immediately, her child would have a disability          (it could have been haemophilia); but if she waited three          months her child would not have the disability. If we          think she would do wrong not to wait, it can only be          because we are comparing the two possible lives and          judging one to have better prospects than the other. Of          course, at this stage no life has begun; but the question          is, when does a life, in the morally significant sense,          really begin? in Chapters 4 and 5 we saw several reasons          for saying that life only begins in the morally          significant sense when there is awareness of one's          existence over time. The metaphor of life as a journey          also provides a reason for holding that in infancy,          life's voyage has scarcely begun.        <\/p>\n<p>          Regarding newborn infants as replaceable, as we now          regard fetuses, would have considerable advantages over          prenatal diagnosis followed by abortion. Prenatal          diagnosis still cannot detect all major disabilities.          Some disabilities, in fact, are not present before birth;          they may be the result of extremely pre- mature birth, or          of something going wrong in the birth process itself. At          present parents can choose to keep or destroy their          disabled offspring only if the disability happens to be          detected during pregnancy. There is no logical basis for          restricting parents' choice to these particular          disabilities. If disabled newborn infants were not          regarded as having a right to life until, say, a week or          a month after birth it would allow parents, in          consultation with their doctors, to choose on the basis          of far greater knowledge of the infant's condition than          is possible before birth.          All these remarks have been concerned with the wrongness          of ending the life of the infant, considered in itself          rather than for its effects on others. When we take          effects on others into account, the picture may alter.          Obviously, to go through the whole of pregnancy and          labour, only to give birth to a child who one decides          should not live, would be a difficult, perhaps          heartbreaking, experience. For this reason many women          would prefer prenatal diagnosis and abortion rather than          live birth with the possibility of infanticide; but if          the latter is not morally worse than the former, this          would seem to be a choice that the woman herself should          be allowed to make.        <\/p>\n<p>          Another factor to take into account is the possibility of          adoption. When there are more couples wishing to adopt          than nor- mal children available for adoption, a          childless couple may be prepared to adopt a haemophiliac.          This would relieve the mother of the burden of bringing          up a haemophiliac child, and enable her to have another          child, if she wished. Then the replaceability argument          could not justify infanticide, for bringing the other          child into existence would not be dependent on the death          of the haemophiliac. The death of the haemophiliac would          then be a straightforward loss of a life of positive          quality, not outweighed by the creation of another being          with a better life.        <\/p>\n<p>          So the issue of ending life for disabled newborn infants          is not without complications, which we do not have the          space to discuss adequately. Nevertheless the main point          is clear: killing a disabled infant is not morally          equivalent to killing a person. Very often it is not          wrong at all.        <\/p>\n<p>          Other Non-voluntary Life and Death Decisions        <\/p>\n<p>          In the preceding section we discussed justifiable killing          for beings who have never been capable of choosing to          live or die. Ending a life without consent may also be          considered in the case of those who were once persons          capable of choosing to live or die, but now, through          accident or old age, have permanently lost this capacity,          and did not, prior to losing it, express any views about          whether they wished to go on living in such          circumstances. These cases are not rare. Many hospitals          care for motor accident victims whose brains have been          damaged beyond all possible recovery. They may survive,          in a coma, or perhaps barely conscious, for several          years. In 1991, the Lancet reported that Rita Greene, a          nurse, had been a patient at D.C. General Hospital in          Washington for thirty-nine years without knowing it. Now          aged sixty-three, she had been in a vegetative state          since undergoing open heart surgery in 1952. The report          stated that at any given time, between 5,000 and 10,000          Americans are surviving in a vegetative state. In other          developed countries, where life-prolonging technology is          not used so aggressively, there are far fewer long-term          patients in this condition.        <\/p>\n<p>          In most respects, these human beings do not differ          importantly from disabled infants. They are not          self-conscious, rational, or autonomous, and so          considerations of a right to life or of respecting          autonomy do not apply. If they have no experiences at          all, and can never have any again, their lives have no          intrinsic value. Their life's journey has come to an end.          They are biologically alive, but not biographically. (If          this verdict seems harsh, ask yourself whether there is          anything to choose between the following options: (a)          instant death or (b) instant coma, followed by death,          without recovery, in ten years' time. I can see no          advantage in survival in a comatose state, if death          without recovery is certain.) The lives of those who are          not in a coma and are conscious but not self-conscious          have value if such beings experience more pleasure than          pain, or have preferences that can be satisfied; but it          is difficult to see the point of keeping such human          beings alive if their life is, on the whole, miserable.        <\/p>\n<p>          There is one important respect in which these cases          differ from disabled infants. In discussing infanticide          in the final section of Chapter 6, 1 cited Bentham's          comment that infanticide need not 'give the slightest          inquietude to the most timid imagination'. This is          because those old enough to be aware of the killing of          disabled infants are necessarily outside the scope of the          policy. This cannot be said of euthanasia applied to          those who once were rational and self-conscious. So a          possible objection to this form of euthanasia would be          that it will lead to insecurity and fear among those who          are not now, but might come to be, within its scope. For          instance, elderly people, knowing that non-voluntary          euthanasia is sometimes applied to senile elderly          patients, bedridden, suffering, and lacking the capacity          to accept or reject death, might fear that every          injection or tablet will be lethal. This fear might be          quite irrational, but it would be difficult to convince          people of this, particularly if old age really had          affected their memory or powers of reasoning.        <\/p>\n<p>          This objection might be met by a procedure allowing those          who do not wish to be subjected to non-voluntary          euthanasia under any circumstances to register their          refusal. Perhaps this would suffice; but perhaps it would          not provide enough reassurance. if not, non-voluntary          euthanasia would be justifiable only for those never          capable of choosing to live or die.        <\/p>\n<p>          JUSTIFYING VOLUNTARY EUTHANASIA        <\/p>\n<p>          Under existing laws in most countries, people suffering          unrelievable pain or distress from an incurable illness          who beg their doctors to end their lives are asking their          doctors to risk a murder charge. Although juries are          extremely reluctant to convict in cases of this kind the          law is clear that neither the request, nor the degree of          suffering, nor the incurable condition of the person          killed, is a defence to a charge of murder. Advocates of          voluntary euthanasia propose that this law be changed so          that a doctor could legally act on a patient's desire to          die without further suffering. Doctors have been able to          do this quite openly in the Netherlands, as a result of a          series of court decisions during the 1980s, as long as          they comply with certain conditions. In Ger- many,          doctors may provide a patient with the means to end her          life, but they may not administer the substance to her.        <\/p>\n<p>          The case for voluntary euthanasia has some common ground          with the case for non-voluntary euthanasia, in that death          is a benefit for the one killed. The two kinds of          euthanasia differ, however, in that voluntary euthanasia          involves the killing of a person, a rational and          self-conscious being and not a merely conscious being.          (To be strictly accurate it must be said that this is not          always so, because although only rational and          self-conscious beings can consent to their own deaths,          they may not be rational and self-conscious at the time          euthanasia is contemplated - the doctor may, for          instance, be acting on a prior written request for          euthanasia if, through accident or illness, one's          rational faculties should be irretrievably lost. For          simplicity we shall, henceforth, disregard this          complication.)        <\/p>\n<p>          We have seen that it is possible to justify ending the          life of a human being who lacks the capacity to consent.          We must now ask in what way the ethical issues are          different when the being is capable of consenting, and          does in fact consent.        <\/p>\n<p>          Let us return to the general principles about killing          proposed in Chapter 4. 1 argued there that killing a          self-conscious being is a more serious matter than          killing a merely conscious being. I gave four distinct          grounds on which this could be argued:        <\/p>\n<p>          1. The classical utilitarian claim that since          self-conscious beings are capable of fearing their own          death, killing them has worse effects on others.          2. The preference utilitarian calculation that counts the          thwarting of the victim's desire to go on living as an          important reason against killing.          3. A theory of rights according to which to have a right          one must have the ability to desire that to which one has          a right, so that to have a right to life one must be able          to desire one's own continued existence.          4. Respect for the autonomous decisions of rational          agents.        <\/p>\n<p>          Now suppose we have a situation in which a person          suffering from a painful and incurable disease wishes to          die. if the individual were not a person - not rational          or self-conscious - euthanasia would, as I have said, be          justifiable. Do any of the four grounds for holding that          it is normally worse to kill a person provide reasons          against killing when the individual is a person who wants          to die?        <\/p>\n<p>          The classical utilitarian objection does not apply to          killing that takes place only with the genuine consent of          the person killed. That people are killed under these          conditions would have no tendency to spread fear or          insecurity, since we have no cause to be fearful of being          killed with our own genuine consent. If we do not wish to          be killed, we simply do not consent. In fact, the          argument from fear points in favour of voluntary          euthanasia, for if voluntary euthanasia is not permitted          we may, with good cause, be fearful that our deaths will          be unnecessarily drawn out and distressing. In the          Netherlands, a nationwide study commissioned by the          government found that 'Many patients want an assurance          that their doctor will assist them to die should          suffering become unbearable.' Often, having received this          assurance, no persistent request for euthanasia          eventuated. The availability of euthanasia brought          comfort without euthanasia having to be provided.        <\/p>\n<p>          Preference utilitarianism also points in favour of, not          against, voluntary euthanasia. Just as preference          utilitarianism must count a desire to go on living as a          reason against killing, so it must count a desire to die          as a reason for killing.        <\/p>\n<p>          Next, according to the theory of rights we have          considered, it is an essential feature of a right that          one can waive one's rights if one so chooses. I may have          a right to privacy; but I can, if I wish, film every          detail of my daily life and invite the neighbours to my          home movies. Neighbours sufficiently intrigued to accept          my invitation could do so without violating my right to          privacy, since the right has on this occasion been          waived. Similarly, to say that I have a right to life is          not to say that it would be wrong for my doctor to end my          life, if she does so at my request. In making this          request I waive my right to life.        <\/p>\n<p>          Lastly, the principle of respect for autonomy tells us to          allow rational agents to live their own lives according          to their own autonomous decisions, free from coercion or          interference; but if rational agents should autonomously          choose to die, then respect for autonomy will lead us to          assist them to do as they choose.        <\/p>\n<p>          So, although there are reasons for thinking that killing          a self-conscious being is normally worse than killing any          other kind of being, in the special case of voluntary          euthanasia most of these reasons count for euthanasia          rather than against. Surprising as this result might at          first seem, it really does no more than reflect the fact          that what is special about self-conscious beings is that          they can know that they exist over time and will, unless          they die, continue to exist. Normally this continued          existence is fervently desired; when the foreseeable          continued existence is dreaded rather than desired          however, the desire to die may take the place of the          normal desire to live, reversing the reasons against          killing based on the desire to live. Thus the case for          voluntary euthanasia is arguably much stronger than the          case for non-voluntary euthanasia.        <\/p>\n<p>          Some opponents of the legalisation of voluntary          euthanasia might concede that all this follows, if we          have a genuinely free and rational decision to die: but,          they add, we can never be sure that a request to be          killed is the result of a free and rational decision.          Will not the sick and elderly be pressured by their          relatives to end their lives quickly? Will it not be          possible to commit outright murder by pretending that a          person has requested euthanasia? And even if there is no          pressure of falsification, can anyone who is ill,          suffering pain, and very probably in a drugged and          confused state of mind, make a rational decision about          whether to live or die?        <\/p>\n<p>          These questions raise technical difficulties for the          legalisation of voluntary euthanasia, rather than          objections to the under- lying ethical principles; but          they are serious difficulties nonetheless. The guidelines          developed by the courts in the Netherlands have sought to          meet them by proposing that euthanasia is acceptable only          if        <\/p>\n<p>          Euthanasia in these circumstances is strongly supported          by the Royal Dutch Medical Association, and by the          general public in the Netherlands. The guidelines make          murder in the guise of euthanasia rather far-fetched, and          there is no evidence of an increase in the murder rate in          the Netherlands.        <\/p>\n<p>          It is often said, in debates about euthanasia, that          doctors can be mistaken. In rare instances patients          diagnosed by two competent doctors as suffering from an          incurable condition have survived and enjoyed years of          good health. Possibly the legalisation of voluntary          euthanasia would, over the years, mean the deaths of a          few people who would otherwise have recovered from their          immediate illness and lived for some extra years. This is          not, however, the knockdown argument against euthanasia          that some imagine it to be. Against a very small number          of unnecessary deaths that might occur if euthanasia is          legalised we must place the very large amount of pain and          distress that will be suffered if euthanasia is not          legalised, by patients who really are terminally ill.          Longer life is not such a supreme good that it outweighs          all other considerations. (if it were, there would be          many more effective ways of saving life - such as a ban          on smoking, or a reduction of speed limits to 40          kilometres per hour - than prohibiting voluntary          euthanasia.) The possibility that two doctors may make a          mistake means that the person who opts for euthanasia is          deciding on the balance of probabilities and giving up a          very slight chance of survival in order to avoid          suffering that will almost certainly end in death. This          may be a perfectly rational choice. Probability is the          guide of life, and of death, too. Against this, some will          reply that improved care for the terminally ill has          eliminated pain and made voluntary euthanasia          unnecessary. Elisabeth Kubler-Ross, whose On Death and          Dying is perhaps the best-known book on care for the          dying, has claimed that none of her patients request          euthanasia. Given personal attention an the right          medication, she says, people come to accept their deaths          and die peacefully without pain.        <\/p>\n<p>          Kubler-Ross may be right. It may be possible, now, to          eliminate pain. In almost all cases, it may even be          possible to do it in a way that leaves patients in          possession of their rational faculties and free from          vomiting, nausea, or other distressing side-effects.          Unfortunately only a minority of dying patients now          receive this kind of care. Nor is physical pain the only          problem. There can also be other distressing conditions,          like bones so fragile they fracture at sudden movements,          uncontrollable nausea and vomiting, slow starvation due          to a cancerous growth, inability to control one's bowels          or bladder, difficulty in breathing, and so on.        <\/p>\n<p>          Dr Timothy Quill, a doctor from Rochester, New York, has          described how he prescribed barbiturate sleeping pills          for 'Diane', a patient with a severe form of leukaemia,          knowing that she wanted the tablets in order to be able          to end her life. Dr Quill had known Diane for many years,          and admired her courage in dealing with previous serious          illnesses. in an article in the New England Journal of          Medicine, Dr Quill wrote:        <\/p>\n<p>          It was extraordinarily important to Diane to maintain          control of herself and her own dignity during the time          remaining to her. When this was no longer possible, she          clearly wanted to die. As a former director of a hospice          program, I know how to use pain medicines to keep          patients comfortable and lessen suffering. I explained          the philosophy of comfort care, which I strongly believe          in. Although Diane understood and appreciated this, she          had known of people lingering in what was called relative          com- fort, and she wanted no part of it. When the time          came, she wanted to take her life in the least painful          way possible. Knowing of her desire for independence and          her decision to stay in control, I thought this request          made perfect sense.... In our discussion it became clear          that preoccupation with her fear of a lingering death          would interfere with Diane's getting the most out of the          time she had left until she found a safe way to ensure          her death.        <\/p>\n<p>          Not all dying patients who wish to die are fortunate          enough to have a doctor like Timothy Quill. Betty Rollin          has described, in her moving book Last Wish, how her          mother developed ovarian cancer that spread to other          parts of her body. One morning her mother said to her:        <\/p>\n<p>          I've had a wonderful life, but now it's over, or it          should be. I'm not afraid to die, but I am afraid of this          illness, what it's doing to me.... There's never any          relief from it now. Nothing but nausea and this pain....          There won't be any more chemotherapy. There's no          treatment anymore. So what happens to me now? I know what          happens. I'll die slowly .... I don't want that .... Who          does it benefit if I die slowly? if it benefits my          children I'd be willing. But it's not going to do you any          good .... There's no point in a slow death, none. I've          never liked doing things with no point. I've got to end          this.        <\/p>\n<p>          Betty Rollin found it very difficult to help her mother          to carry out her desire: 'Physician after physician          turned down our pleas for help (How many pills? What          kind?).' After her book about her mother's death was          published, she received hundreds of letters, many from          people, or close relatives of people, who had tried to          die, failed, and suffered even more. Many of these people          were denied help from doctors, because although suicide          is legal in most jurisdictions, assisted suicide is not.        <\/p>\n<p>          Perhaps one day it will be possible to treat all          terminally ill and incurable patients in such a way that          no one requests euthanasia and the subject becomes a          non-issue; but this is now just a utopian ideal, and no          reason at all to deny euthanasia to those who must live          and die in far less comfortable conditions. It is, in any          case, highly paternalistic to tell dying patients that          they are now so well looked after that they need not be          offered the option of euthanasia. It would be more in          keeping with respect for individual freedom and autonomy          to legalise euthanasia and let patients decide whether          their situation is bearable.        <\/p>\n<p>          Do these arguments for voluntary euthanasia perhaps give          too much weight to individual freedom and autonomy? After          all, we do not allow people free choices on matters like,          for instance, the taking of heroin. This is a restriction          of freedom but, in the view of many, one that can be          justified on paternalistic grounds. If preventing people          from becoming heroin addicts is justifiable paternalism,          why isn't preventing people from having themselves          killed?        <\/p>\n<p>          The question is a reasonable one, because respect for          individual freedom can be carded too far. John Stuart          Mill thought that the state should never interfere with          the individual except to prevent harm to others. The          individual's own good, Mill thought, is not a proper          reason for state intervention. But Mill may have had too          high an opinion of the rationality of a human being. It          may occasionally be right to prevent people from making          choices that are obviously not rationally based and that          we can be sure they will later regret. The prohibition of          voluntary euthanasia cannot be justified on paternalistic          grounds, how- ever, for voluntary euthanasia is an act          for which good reasons exist. Voluntary euthanasia occurs          only when, to the best of medical knowledge, a person is          suffering from an incurable and painful or extremely          distressing condition. In these circumstances one cannot          say that to choose to die quickly is obviously          irrational. The strength of the case for voluntary          euthanasia lies in this combination of respect for the          preferences, or autonomy, of those who decide for          euthanasia; and the clear rational basis of the decision          itself.        <\/p>\n<p>          NOT JUSTIFYING INVOLUNTARY EUTHANASIA        <\/p>\n<p>          Involuntary euthanasia resembles voluntary euthanasia in          that it involves the killing of those capable of          consenting to their own death. It differs in that they do          not consent. This difference is crucial, as the argument          of the preceding section shows. All the four reasons          against killing self-conscious beings apply when the          person killed does not choose to die.        <\/p>\n<p>          Would it ever be possible to justify involuntary          euthanasia on paternalistic grounds, to save someone          extreme agony? It might be possible to imagine a case in          which the agony was so great, and so certain, that the          weight of utilitarian considerations favouring euthanasia          override all four reasons against killing self-conscious          beings. Yet to make this decision one would have to be          confident that one can judge when a person's life is so          bad as to be not worth living, better than that person          can judge herself it is not clear that we are ever          justified in having much confidence in our judgments          about whether the life of another person is, to that          person, worth living. That the other person wishes to go          on living is good evidence that her life is worth living.          What better evidence could there be?        <\/p>\n<p>          The only kind of case in which the paternalistic argument          is at all plausible is one in which the person to be          killed does not realise what agony she will suffer in          future, and if she is not killed now she will have to          live through to the very end. On these grounds one might          kill a person who has - though she does not yet realise          it - fallen into the hands of homicidal sadists who will          torture her to death. These cases are, fortunately, more          commonly encountered in fiction than reality.        <\/p>\n<p>          If in real life we are unlikely ever to encounter a case          of justifiable involuntary euthanasia, then it may be          best to dismiss from our minds the fanciful cases in          which one might imagine defending it, and treat the rule          against involuntary euthanasia as, for all practical          purposes, absolute. Here [R. M.] Hare's distinction          between critical and intuitive levels of moral reasoning          (see Chapter 4), is again relevant. The case described in          the preceding paragraph is one in which, if we were          reasoning at the critical level, we might consider          involuntary euthanasia justifiable; but at the intuitive          level, the level of moral reasoning we apply in our daily          lives, we can simply say that euthanasia is only          justifiable if those killed either        <\/p>\n<p>          1. lack the ability to consent to death, because they          lack the capacity to understand the choice between their          own continued existence or non-existence; or          2. have the capacity to choose between their own          continued life or death and to make an informed,          voluntary, and settled decision to die.        <\/p>\n<p>          ACTIVE AND PASSIVE EUTHANASIA        <\/p>\n<p>          The conclusions we have reached in this chapter will          shock a large number of readers, for they violate one of          the most fundamental tenets of Western ethics - the          wrongness of killing innocent human beings. I have          already made one attempt to show that my conclusions are,          at least in the area of disabled infants, a less radical          departure from existing practice than one might suppose.          I pointed out that many societies allow a pregnant woman          to Ml a fetus at a late stage of pregnancy if there is a          significant risk of it being disabled; and since the line          between a developed fetus and a newborn infant is not a          crucial moral divide, it is difficult to see why it is          worse to kill a newborn infant known to be disabled. In          this section I shall argue that there is another area of          accepted medical practice that is not intrinsically          different from the practices that the arguments of this          chapter would allow.        <\/p>\n<p>          I have already referred to the birth defect known as          spina bifida, in which the infant is born with an opening          in the back, exposing the spinal cord. Until 1957, most          of these infants died young, but in that year doctors          began using a new kind of valve, to drain off the excess          fluid that otherwise accumulates in the head with this          condition. In some hospitals it then became standard          practice to make vigorous efforts to save every spina          bifida infant. The result was that few such infants died          - but of those who survived, many were severely disabled,          with gross paralysis, multiple deformities of the legs          and spine, and no control of bowel or bladder.          Intellectual disabilities were also common. in short, the          existence of these children caused great difficulty for          their families and was often a misery for the children          themselves.        <\/p>\n<p>          After studying the results of this policy of active          treatment a British doctor, John Lorber, proposed that          instead of treating all cases of spina bifida, only those          who have the defect in a mild form should be selected for          treatment. (He proposed that the final decision should be          up to the parents, but parents nearly always accept the          recommendations of the doctors.) This principle of          selective treatment has now been widely accepted in many          countries and in Britain has been recognised as          legitimate by the Department of Health and Social          Security. The result is that fewer spina bifida children          survive beyond infancy, but those who do survive are, by          and large, the ones whose physical and mental          disabilities are relatively minor.        <\/p>\n<p>          The policy of selection, then, appears to be a desirable          one:but what happens to those disabled infants not          selected for treatment? Lorber does not disguise the fact          that in these cases the hope is that the infant will die          soon and without suffering. it is to achieve this          objective that surgical operations and other forms of          active treatment are not undertaken, although pain and          discomfort are as far as possible relieved. If the infant          happens to get an infection, the kind of infection that          in a normal infant would be swiftly cleared up with          antibiotics, no antibiotics are given. Since the survival          of the infant is not desired, no steps are taken to          prevent a condition, easily curable by ordinary medical          techniques, proving fatal.        <\/p>\n<p>          All this is, as I have said, accepted medical practice.          in articles in medical journals, doctors have described          cases in which they have allowed infants to die. These          cases are not limited to spina bifida, but include, for          instance, babies born with Down's syndome and other          complications. In 1982, the 'Baby Doe' case brought this          practice to the attention of the American public. 'Baby          Doe' was the legal pseudonym of a baby born in          Bloomington, Indiana, with Down's syndrome and some          additional problems. The most serious of these was that          the passage from the mouth to the stomach - the          oesophagus - was not property formed. This meant that          Baby Doe could not receive nourishment by mouth. The          problem could have been repaired by surgery - but in this          case the parents, after discussing the situation with          their obstetrician, refused permission for surgery.          Without surgery, Baby Doe would soon die. Baby Doe's          father later said that as a schoolteacher he had worked          closely with Down syndrome children, and that he and his          wife had decided that it was in the best interests of          Baby Doe, and of their family a whole (they had two other          children), to refuse consent f the operation. The          hospital authorities, uncertain of their leg position,          took the matter to court. Both the local county court and          the Indiana State Supreme Court upheld the parents' rig]          to refuse consent to surgery. The case attracted national          made attention, and an attempt was made to take it to the          U.S. Supreme Court, but before this could happen, Baby          Doe died.        <\/p>\n<p>          One result of the Baby Doe case was that the U.S.          government headed at the time by President Ronald Reagan,          who had come, to power with the backing of the right-wing          religious 'Moral Majority', issued a regulation directing          that all infants are to be given necessary life-saving          treatment, irrespective of disability. But the new          regulations were strongly resisted by the American          Medical Association and the American Academy of          Pediatrics. In court hearings on the regulations, even Dr          C. Everett Koop, Reagan's surgeon-general and the driving          force behind the attempt to ensure that all infants          should be treated, had to admit that there were some          cases in which he would not provide life sustaining          treatment. Dr Koop mentioned three conditions in which,          he said, life-sustaining treatment was not appropriate          anencephalic infants (infants born without a brain);          infants who had, usually as a result of extreme          prematurity, suffered such severe bleeding in the brain          that they would never be able to breathe without a          respirator and would never be able even to recognise          another person; and infants lacking a major part of their          digestive tract, who could only be kept alive by means o          a drip providing nourishment directly into the          bloodstream.        <\/p>\n<p>          The regulations were eventually accepted only in a          watered down form, allowing some flexibility to doctors.          Even so, a subsequent survey of American paediatricians          specialising in the care of newborn infants showed that          76 percent thought that the regulations were not          necessary, 66 percent considered the regulations          interfered with parents' right to determine what course          of action was in the best interests of their children,          and 60 percent believed that the regulations did not          allow adequate consideration of infants' suffering.        <\/p>\n<p>          In a series of British cases, the courts have accepted          the view that the quality of a child's life is a relevant          consideration in deciding whether life-sustaining          treatment should be provided. In a case called In re B,          concerning a baby like Baby Doe, with Down's syndrome and          an intestinal obstruction, the court said that surgery          should be carried out, because the infant's life would          not be'demonstrably awful'. in another case, Re C, where          the baby had a poorly formed brain combined with severe          physical handicaps, the court authorised the paediatric          team to refrain from giving life-prolonging treatment.          This was also the course taken in the case of Re Baby J:          this infant was born extremely prematurely, and was blind          and deaf and would probably never have been able to          speak.        <\/p>\n<p>          Thus, though many would disagree with Baby Doe's parents          about allowing a Down's syndrome infant to die (because          people with Down's syndrome can live enjoyable lives and          be warm and loving individuals), virtually everyone          recognises that in more severe conditions, allowing an          infant to die is the only humane and ethically acceptable          course to take. The question is: if it is right to allow          infants to die, why is it wrong to kill them?        <\/p>\n<p>          This question has not escaped the notice of the doctors          involved. Frequently they answer it by a pious reference          to the nineteenth-century poet, Arthur Clough, who wrote:        <\/p>\n<p>          Thou shalt not kill; but need'st not strive Officiously          to keep alive.        <\/p>\n<p>          Unfortunately for those who appeal to Clough's immortal          lines as an authoritative ethical pronouncement, they          come from a biting satire - 'The Latest Decalogue' - the          intent of which is to mock the attitudes described. The          opening lines, for example, are:        <\/p>\n<p>          Thou shalt have one god only; who Would be at the expense          of two. No graven images may be Worshipped except the          currency.        <\/p>\n<p>          So Clough cannot be numbered on the side of those who          think it wrong to kill, but right not to try too hard to          keep alive. is there, nonetheless, something to be said          for this idea? The view that there is something to be          said for it is often termed 'the acts and omissions          doctrine'. It holds that there is an important moral          distinction between performing an act that has certain          consequences - say , the death of a disabled child - and          omitting to do something that has the same consequences.          if this doctrine is correct, the doctor who gives the          child a lethal injection does wrong; the doctor who omits          to give the child antibiotics, knowing full well that          without antibiotics the child will die, does not.        <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>View original post here: <\/p>\n<p><a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\" href=\"http:\/\/www.utilitarian.net\/singer\/by\/1993----.htm\" title=\"Taking Life: Humans, by Peter Singer - Utilitarian\">Taking Life: Humans, by Peter Singer - Utilitarian<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> In dealing with an objection to the view of abortion presented in Chapter 6, we have already looked beyond abortion to infanticide.  <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/euthanasia\/taking-life-humans-by-peter-singer-utilitarian\/\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":4,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[187830],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-174772","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-euthanasia"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/174772"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/4"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=174772"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/174772\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=174772"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=174772"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=174772"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}