J
jonathan_hili
Guest
Hi all.
If it is argued that people have a right, be it moral or legal (based in some respects on a human’s intrinsic natural right), to euthanasia, doesn’t it follow that people also have a right to commit suicide?
Now, it may be argued that the “right” is conditional on, for example, unremitting pain or one’s state of consciousness, but I can’t see how any of these conditions don’t also justify suicide.
If a person has a debilitating cancer and has no chance of pain relief, it may be argued that this justifies euthanasia, principally if the patient thinks so. However, a teenager suffering from a broken heart would also consider that his or her pain will last a life-time and want to die.
Why is our society, which seems so willing to allow old people to commit suicide, so unwilling to let young people commit suicide?
If it is argued that people have a right, be it moral or legal (based in some respects on a human’s intrinsic natural right), to euthanasia, doesn’t it follow that people also have a right to commit suicide?
Now, it may be argued that the “right” is conditional on, for example, unremitting pain or one’s state of consciousness, but I can’t see how any of these conditions don’t also justify suicide.
If a person has a debilitating cancer and has no chance of pain relief, it may be argued that this justifies euthanasia, principally if the patient thinks so. However, a teenager suffering from a broken heart would also consider that his or her pain will last a life-time and want to die.
Why is our society, which seems so willing to allow old people to commit suicide, so unwilling to let young people commit suicide?