Welcome to CyberEssays Website

Morality Of Euthanasia - A Moral Perspective On This Debate

  • Abortion From A Moral Perspective
    Kellard is a pro-choice article that examines the issue of abortion from a moral perspective. He comments on the opinions of Christian Conservatives and compares...
  • Active Euthanasia- A Kantian Perspective
    Active Euthenasia – From A Kantian Perspective Euthanasia is one of society's more widely debated moral issues of our time. Active euthanasia is; "Doing something...
  • Active Euthanasia- A Kantian Perspective
    Active Euthenasia – From A Kantian Perspective Euthanasia is one of society's more widely debated moral issues of our time. Active euthanasia is; "Doing something...
  • Lawrence Kohlbergs Stages Of Moral Development
    engage in male activities they may realize the inadequacy of their fellow women moral perspective, and only in this way will they progress, like men, toward higher...
  • Kohlberg's Stages Of Moral Development
    major levels. Each level represented a fundamental shift in the social-moral perspective of the individual. At the first level, the preconventional level, a person...

Morality Of Euthanasia - A Moral Perspective On This Debate

"The third night that I roomed with Jack in our tiny double room, in
the solid-tumor ward of the cancer clinic of the National Institute of
Health in Maryland, a terrible thought occurred to me.   Jack had a
melanoma in his belly, a malignant solid tumor that the doctors
guessed was the size of a softball.   The doctors planned to remove the
tumor, but they knew Jack would soon die.   The cancer had now spread
out of control.   Jack, about 28, was in constant pain, and his doctor
had prescribed an intravenous shot, a pain killer, and this would
control the pain for perhaps two hours or a bit more. Then he would
begin to moan, or whimper, very low, as though he didn't want to wake
me.   Then he would begin to howl, like a dog.   When this happened, he
would ring for a nurse, and ask for the pain-killer. The third night
of his routine, a terrible thought occurred to me. 'If Jack were a
dog, I thought, what would be done to him?'   The answer was obvious:  
the pound, and the chloroform.   No human being with a spark of pity
could let a living thing suffer so, to no good end."   (James Rachel's
The Morality of Euthanasia)

        The experience of Stewart Alsop, a respected journalist, who
died in 1975 of a rare form of cancer gave an example on the morality
of euthanasia.   Before he died, he wrote movingly of his experiences
with another terminal patient.   Although he had not thought much about
euthanasia before, he came to approve of it after sharing a room with
Jack. While growing up, each of us learns a large number of rules of
conduct.   Which rules we learn will depend on the kind of society we
live in and the parents and the friends we have.   We may learn to be
honest, to be loyal, and to work hard.   Sometimes we learn a rule
without understanding its point.   In most cases this may work out, for
the rule may be designed to cover ordinary circumstances, but when
faced with unusual situations, we may be in trouble....