Central elements of Roman Catholic treatment ethics include: 1) that rejection of treatment with the intent of hastening death (even for a good end) is ethically equivalent to active euthanasia with the same intent; 2) a distinction between morally obligatory “ordinary” treatment and morally optional “extraordinary treatment”; 3) that the quality of the patient’s life is not be a legitimate basis for rejecting treatment; and 4) that extraordinary treatment is not forbidden, but optional, and that it is the patient or the patient’s legal surrogate–not the doctor– who has the right to choose or reject it. Despite these principles, even in a cultural climate fully sympathetic to Catholic treatment ethics, it is appropriate as a legal matter to...
Religion has long provided guidance that has led to standards reflected in some aspects of medical p...
This article develops the moral discussion about the legalisation of the practice of euthanasia and ...
grantor: University of TorontoThis work addresses the legal and ethical justification for ...
Central elements of Roman Catholic treatment ethics include: 1) that rejection of treatment with the...
Roman Catholic moral theology follows a centuries-old tradition of moral reflection. Contemporary Ro...
Traditional Abrahamic religious teaching states that it is wrong to kill the innocent. However, adva...
Whether it is called “dignified”, “proud” or “privileged death”, “voluntary killing”, killing at re...
Philosophers who defend a person’s right, under certain circumstances, to end his own life or to hav...
Philosophers who defend a person’s right, under certain circumstances, to end his own life or to hav...
The question of euthanasia is one of the most difficult moral problems that arise in the context of ...
The present ethical advice tackles the question as to how caregivers in a Catholic mental health ser...
The question of euthanasia has kept pre-occupying and agitating the minds of thinkers, sweeping the ...
A persistent misunderstanding of the moral distinctions between the practices of euthanasia, assiste...
During my time at Regis, I have constantly revisited one question: how can I, as an aspiring physici...
When understanding a specific case in bioethics, it is important to acknowledge four basic bioethica...
Religion has long provided guidance that has led to standards reflected in some aspects of medical p...
This article develops the moral discussion about the legalisation of the practice of euthanasia and ...
grantor: University of TorontoThis work addresses the legal and ethical justification for ...
Central elements of Roman Catholic treatment ethics include: 1) that rejection of treatment with the...
Roman Catholic moral theology follows a centuries-old tradition of moral reflection. Contemporary Ro...
Traditional Abrahamic religious teaching states that it is wrong to kill the innocent. However, adva...
Whether it is called “dignified”, “proud” or “privileged death”, “voluntary killing”, killing at re...
Philosophers who defend a person’s right, under certain circumstances, to end his own life or to hav...
Philosophers who defend a person’s right, under certain circumstances, to end his own life or to hav...
The question of euthanasia is one of the most difficult moral problems that arise in the context of ...
The present ethical advice tackles the question as to how caregivers in a Catholic mental health ser...
The question of euthanasia has kept pre-occupying and agitating the minds of thinkers, sweeping the ...
A persistent misunderstanding of the moral distinctions between the practices of euthanasia, assiste...
During my time at Regis, I have constantly revisited one question: how can I, as an aspiring physici...
When understanding a specific case in bioethics, it is important to acknowledge four basic bioethica...
Religion has long provided guidance that has led to standards reflected in some aspects of medical p...
This article develops the moral discussion about the legalisation of the practice of euthanasia and ...
grantor: University of TorontoThis work addresses the legal and ethical justification for ...