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Here’s how I look at it: I know enough stories of suicide to know that it is an act that *can *be completed by all sorts of not-especially-competent people. If I thought that suicide was (or, in the right circumstances, could be) an option for me, I would be sure to have a plan formulated in my lucid moments that I could easily recall and enact in my not-so-lucid moments (kind of like knowing where the fire escape is or how to perform the Heimlich manoeuvre). I don’t actually bother thinking much about the technical question, but only because it is rendered moot for me by the way I have resolved the moral question. How does this work for you?I do not suppose you are naive at all. Frankly when I’m not having periods of suicidal ideation I don’t think about it much but honestly I don’t know that I could come up with a good way to properly kill myself. I am hesitant to give the full list for fear of giving people ideas but yes, I am by no means confident in my ability to complete a suicide.
Please see below.
I am not seeing what the qualification “a priori” adds to your claim. How is the a posteriori case (= what, exactly?) different? Could you tell me what your training is that allows you to answer the question you have emphatically answered (namely(?), suicide is a morally legitimate choice and suicide-assistance should be legally sanctioned) - and, if it isn’t obvious, how it is that this training has qualified you to answer these questions?I’m sorry for the confusion, I was not trying to say there legislators have an a priori claim to have a better claim on this issue. I was just saying that I do not know ‘what… are the criteria that one must fulfill’ to make a claim for physician assisted suicide and I think the laws that exist now would be a good jumping off point to answer your question. I think my very rough answer would be that an individuals desire to end his or her life should not be the result of a diagnosable psychological disorder (especially depressive and anxiety disorders) and that the individual ought to be able to understand the impact of his or her decision. To be frank, I do have the training to answer the questions I’ve emphatically answered regarding the right to die but am less qualified to answer the psychological and legal ones–and hence less confident in doing so.
I was just curious about this one, I don’t know that it really matters. I was thinking if you found someone with a suicide note, unconscious, and part of their jaw blown off, would it be okay to pick up the gun and unload a few where it counts? Or if someone jumped off a short cliff, again, with a suicide note, and you found them on the rocks still breathing, would it be right to affirm their choice by bashing their head in with a boulder?What makes the situation interesting? If we can’t know what they’re thinking because they’ve been brain damaged into severe retardation by the attempt then we probably oughtn’t to–at least barring an advanced directive; I for one know I would never want to live like that (via suicide attempt or accident). If we know and they’re not saying they don’t want to die then we oughtn’t to for the obvious reason that they’re saying they don’t want to die. Frankly, I’m not sure what conditions would make this an interesting question. Can you? (Not asked sarcastically or argumentatively; sometimes I hate that tone doesn’t carry via text).
People can have good reasons for not wanting other people to know they are alive (e.g. abusive and stalking exes) but these cases are rather rare but frankly assuming one is not violating any other laws I don’t see a reason for walking out of one’s life to be illegal. Then again I also think personal use of drugs and prostitution should also be legal. The list is longer but I think those two illustrate a libertarian philosophy regarding social issues.I thought you were saying that part of the reason one shouldn’t have a right to die is because it damages other peoples’ lives. I don’t at all; it’s probably not the best action morally speaking but divorce exists for a reason. **[Obviously. But laws *against **divorce have also existed for “a reason.”]
Wow, okay… I guess you *would *advocate the legality of physician-assisted heroine use.
So what constitutes a good reason for something being illegal in your view? (Presumably some ‘libertarian’ reason - but I’ll let you tell me how it goes before critiquing it.)