I respect Stephen Hawking greatly. A Brief
History of Time is an incredible book, one I intend to read again, and the
other scientific ideas I’ve heard come from him have been illuminating. Considering his own medical history (it’s
been 50 years since he was diagnosed with motor neurone disease) I figure he’s
more than earned his right to speak on this subject, however he decides to see
it.
Still, this opens a can of worms and is a subject
that I’d purposely forgotten about years ago.
Suicide is an unpleasant subject and open to a lot of moral
questioning. John Locke said that man
has natural rights to “life, liberty, and property.” I agree with him completely on the right to
life. Sure, we all die eventually, but
while we have our bodies fully functioning, I believe that we have a right to
expect that no one will infringe that natural right. It’s why we view murder with such abhorrence;
our existence is a treasure inherently ours that nobody is allowed to rob us
of.
So we know why we can’t murder. The question is: Does our right to life also
include a right to end our own? If so,
then yes, physician-assisted suicide should be permitted. There would have to be any safeguards put in
place to ensure that a person has not been coerced or misunderstood, and
allowed to change their minds when being assisted in pursuing their own
deaths. But if our right to life does
not include a right to end our own, then suicide is murder and we should be
working to prevent it at all costs.
I haven’t totally made up my mind on the moral
philosophy on whether suicide is murder, although I tend to come out strongly
in favor of pursuing life first and foremost.
I am troubled, though, by the organization of such groups as Compassion
& Choices, whose primary goal is ensuring that every state supports our constitutional
right to die. Go to their website, www.compassionandchoices.org,
and when you go see what they’re about, the first sentence says, “Compassion
& Choices is the leading nonprofit organization committed to helping
everyone have the best death possible.”
With unflinching honesty about their goals, I have to wonder how they
organization grows. After all, their
target audience must continually drop off and they won’t be able to tell their
friends if they were satisfied with the results. Death kind of kills the message along with
the messenger.
No matter how pretty the website or fanciful the
message, it concerns me that we have these groups whose main purpose is
hastening the sick to their death rather than seeing if it isn’t worth it to
hold on just a little longer. After all,
you never know what impact you can still have on the world if you can hold on to life a little longer.
One of the big problems with this is determining when people are legitimately choosing to die. Chemistry is important here. I have a family member who frequently comes close because of various medications. I also shared a link on facebook recently which determined that coffee drinkers are 50% less likely to commit suicide.
ReplyDeleteNow that is interesting. Was there an explanation as to why coffee would make you cling to life, or did they just give the statistics for it?
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