How so? I am not asking as to why Catholics refuse to accept systematic euthanasia of unwilling innocents. No, I’m talking about willing, consenting suicide.
It is wrong for people to kill other people (except in self-defense or if they are guilty of a heinous crime).
It would be wrong for doctors to kill patients, even if the patients want them to, because the doctor would be committing a wrongful act.
The analogy with slavery is not only do we reject people’s being forced into slavery, we reject people’s selling themselves into slavery.
Not at all. I do not see how ending someone’s suffering is treating life as worthless.
It is putting the ending of suffering over life. It would be like blowing up your car because it needs to have the oil changed every three months (a very imperfect analogy offered only to show the reversal of priorities.)
Does a momentousness amount of suffering or being forced to live like a vegetable count as life? Is there any life there that is of value?
First let me explain that people are not “forced” to live because they do not die. They are not “forced” to live because we do not murder them.
Second, they are not “living like vegetables.” Notice how the use of the language in our culture has affected your thinking! Their comatose state in no way reduces their humanity in the way implied by the use of our language.
For me to “kill” a carrot is in no way equivalent to a doctor’s killing a human being who happens to be in a long-term comatose state.
I do not believe it is life itself that has value, but what that life consists of.
Well, here is the crux of the problem, then. (I’d smile, but this is too serious a topic.) Your foundational idea differs from a Catholic foundational idea. Your name indicates you are an atheist; you do not believe in God; therefore, you do not see life as a gift from our Creator.
If you see life as a random event with no connection to anything, then naturally you would view it from a utilitarian point of view. If life does not “give value” to its “owner,” then life can be discarded.
The problem, even from a utilitarian point of view, is that without life, there is nothing in this world. To throw away one’s life is to throw out the baby with the bathwater.
Can the person living that life live a happy existence? Can they be made better? If not, what value is there in that life? Why do they need to suffer if they’re only going to die anyway?
You bring up two kinds of people: those who are in reduced states of consciousness and those who are suffering.
The first are not suffering, so it makes no difference to them. The only reason to murder them would be to “relieve the suffering” of *others, *no?
As to others who are suffering, Catholic teaching is that we must care for the patients and reduce their pain. In our society (US), we have such a fear of causing addiction that patients are allowed to live in pain rather than be appropriately treated for that pain.
In fact, Catholic teaching about pain is that if a person is dying of their physical problem, pain must be alleviated lest they fall into despair. If the level of pain is so great that there is even a very strong likelihood that the painreliver dose would kill the patient, one is still permitted to give the medication. (Altho as it turns out, it is rare for this to be the case.)
Yet some people are suffering deeply, many of whom are suffering due to incurable illnesses. It is considered by many to be cruel to not allow people to take their own life.
You seem to acknowledge that fact that we could potentially stop these people suffering, but seem content with it because ‘it just happens’. That isn’t the kind of logic you would apply in any other situation. Do you refuse to donate money to countries suffering from famine due to the fact that suffering is a part of life?
We do not bomb the nation to reduce suffering, do we?
In all cases, relief of suffering is very important; however, relief of suffering is not the only thing. It is also important not to murder people, to instead use appropriate measures to relieve their mental suffering as well.
Oh, and for the record, what do you think would happen if we allowed assisted suicide?
One of the main results I would see is a lack of mental/emotional care of patients. Rather than support which would encourage them to live, we would see a reduction of that help, which would save so much money both immediately and in the long term. Overall, an increase in suffering.