I disagree. The fact that someone is in a vegetative state usually means that they are being kept alive by extraordinary means; that is, they are being kept alive by machines.
Maybe.
That information is not provided.
Of course, I am sure since it is a special pleading argument, whatever facts necessary to make it morally correct to take a life will be brought into the equation.
However, going with what we know, they simply specified ‘vegetative state’
Not ‘persistent vegetative’
So if we really want to open a can of worms, throw the definition at them…
medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/vegetative+state
Nowhere does the church require that one be kept alive by artificial means. All of us have the right to a normal death.
Correct. But as we have seen in the Terri Schivo case, vegatative state can mean a number of things. And artificially supported can easily now mean providing food and water.
I still want more information.
But I doubt the RCIA class will be willing to comply with providing more.
doing so jeopardizes the special pleading argument.
Someone WANTS euthanazia to be right, and vagueness is key to the argument.
Money and other material resources have nothing to do with it.
Agreed. Money has nothing to do with morality.
Getting back to the debate going on with the RCIA, it sounds like addressing euthanasia is not the way to go about it.
Address the argument itself.