news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070914/ap_on_re_eu/vatican_vegetative_state
OK, I can see this getting very problematic, here are some questions I thought of:
- What if someone were to argue that since things like test tube babies are many times decried as being “unnatural births”, doesn’t that mean then that feeding tubes are simply prolonging life longer than it should be and violates the idea of “natural death?”
Apples and oranges. The prohibition on “test tube” babies has to do with man trying to be God and create life while perverting the marital process. Once the life is created, however, all normal means are used to keep the baby alive. Natural death does not mean that you cannot or should not use reasonable medical treatment or technology.
- What about in cases where, let’s say for example, there are parts of the brain that are liquid or parts where the memory cells are totally destroyed. Would we not, at least in those cases, just be keeping just a shell alive since it would be 100% impossible to reverse the damage?
If the brain were that damaged, simple food and water would not keep the person alive. BTW, everyone has parts of the brain where the memory cells are totally destroyed. By your argument, all middle aged people who start to lose memory should be starved to death!
- And what about who pays for it? If a family pays for the up keeping of a brain dead family member I understand, but should the public be taxed for this? Should the 2nd commandment be violated in order to keep someone alive? And what about the fact that as we live longer and longer, we will see tons more cases like this, which would mean that in the future we could potentially have an economic collapse because expensive life-sustaining equipment is being used on tens to hundreds of millions of people?
We are not talking about expensive life-sustaining equipment. We are talking about simple food and hydration. The Church teaching has always been that extraordinary treatment can be legitimately refused by the patient or the family. The Church even allows such machines to be turned off when they are keeping someone alive.
- Lastly lets consider a theoretical situation: What if these feeding tubes and life support stations got so advanced that they could keep that person alive indefinitely. Does that mean we must keep a person alive forever, knowing that they don’t even have a choice in that matter? And if not, then the question is under what circumstances or time frame do we pull the plug and who does it?
Food and water are no cure for disease or natural aging. You can have the most sophisticated technology for feeding and hydrating a person but they will still die if they have cancer or heart failure or a serious infection.