As there have been several recent* stories in the mainstream news about assisted suicide (such as this one, found via BBC Ouch, this one and this one, found via FRIDA, and this rather surreal one, found via the "Breaking News" blog at Fortean Times), i've been thinking about my views on the subject, and decided to try to dig up an old post of mine from a couple of years ago, in which i tried to sum up my position, on Barbelith:
Right, i'm going to try to articulate my position now.
I believe euthanasia is utterly different from assisted suicide (often wrongly conflated with it), and that the difference is basically that the latter is suicide and the former is basically murder.
I believe the only consistent libertarian position that can be taken on life-and-death issues is that the individual, and only the individual, has an absolute right over hir own body and hir own life (and, to make this possible, the only limit to that is that ze absolutely and categorically has not got a right over any other individual's body or life).
This means that i do believe every person, regardless of disability, illness or lack thereof, has the right to suicide, as the right to life, IMO, is rendered utterly meaningless if it is not accompanied by its converse, the right not to choose life. In the case of a person too severely physically disabled to commit suicide without help, therefore i believe that, just as ze has a human right (IMO) to free assistance with every other task ze wants to but is physically unable to do (as far as is possible), ze has a right to be assisted to commit suicide (although i do recognise the potential ethical difficulties in requiring someone employed as a personal assistant to effectively end their own employment, and to do something they may have major moral problems with... so i'm not sure that anyone should be required to assist in an individual's suicide).
Where i think assisted suicide as a right does get into extremely dodgy ground is the issue of doctors or family members putting pressure on a person to commit suicide (to free up hospital beds, say, or relieve the burden of caring responsibilities), or of people's choice to die being motivated primarily be society not accommodating their needs or impressing on them that their life is not worth living or that they don't deserve to live (part of my response to that is, of course, a call for change in social attitudes towards illness and disability; another part is the assertion that assisted suicide should be carried out by someone who the disabled person has authority over, such as a personal assistant, rather than by someone who has authority over them, such as a doctor).
However, assisted suicide is not euthanasia - euthanasia is the killing of one person by another, not by hirself. Euthanasia, to me, is totally morally unacceptable because it is a total violation of the principle of autonomy over one's own body/self - it is not carried out at the request of the patient (or if it is, it should be categorised as assisted suicide), but at the decision of a doctor based on criteria of whether there is any chance of recovery or whether "suffering" is unbearable - criteria which to me are irrelevant, because to me the only possible judge of whether the suffering of life is unbearable is the "sufferer" hirself.
If the person in question has no capacity to consent or no ability to communicate, as in the case of a small child (such as Charlotte Wyatt) or a person who is unconscious or in a vegetative state (such as Terri Schiavo), then IMO the presumption has to be in favour of life - because, if the person's desire, were they conscious or able to consent/communicate, was to die, then they would be being kept alive against their will, but they would not be in a state to know or express that will, whereas if their desire, were they conscious or able to consent/communicate, was to live, and they were "allowed to die", then they would be being killed against their will - and the only word for that is murder.
IMO it makes absolutely no difference if the motive is "ending the person's suffering" as opposed to "hating or wanting to exterminate the person" - in fact, if anything, IMO, the former is worse - paternalism on such a level that the state/doctors/whoever actually gets to overrule your own (actual or speculative) wishes on whether you want to live or not (reminiscent of when Hell is taken over by the angels in Gaiman's Sandman: Season of Mists...) Only the person suffering can decide if hir suffering is great enough to render their life unliveable or not, and if there is no way of finding out their feelings on the matter, or they are not sufficiently capable of rational thought to make such a decision, then IMO the only morally acceptable thing is to keep them alive - just as, if you believe the death penalty is appropriate for a particular crime (rape, say), then it's still not acceptable to execute unless there is proof beyond reasonable doubt that the accused actually did it...
Also IMO there isn't a fundamental difference between killing someone by withdrawal of nutrition, etc (as has been quite correctly pointed out is already routinely done, just not talked about) or by "actively" killing - except that the former could, at an extreme stretch, be sort-of-semi-justified by "lack of resources" arguments, whereas the latter never could...
The "lack of resources" argument is, to me, a bit of a red herring anyway - you could equally well say that, say, gender reassignment operations were not "life-saving" as such, and thus resources should not be spent on them but on more "urgent" operations (which argument is actually used to force transsexuals in the UK to pay (in part) for their own operations even on the NHS, which i'm sure no one here would regard as defensible)... likewise abortion on demand, or anything else...
And i'm not sure why you can dismiss "slippery slope" arguments - if doctors (as opposed to the individual living it) are given the power to decide whether a life is worth saving or not, then what if they decide, say, that a life paralysed isn't worth saving, and don't bother trying to save the lives of people who have had spinal cord injuries? Or, say, that a life with under a certain IQ (itself a highly dodgy concept) isn't worth living, and don't bother giving essential medical treatment to mentally disabled people (which category could include myself)? Many hospitals already deny heart surgery to children because they have Down's syndrome. I personally know people who have recovered from prognoses considered "terminal". These are very real concerns for many disabled people - who do see a slippery slope, and themselves (ourselves) in very real danger of ending up at the bottom of it...
(the original thread is here... there was an interesting, but IMO incomplete, debate there, which IIRC i didn't really feel up to returning to at the time... i also posted a link to a discussion of the same topic on the BBC Ouch message board)
I think i made my views reasonably clear there. If they have changed at all since, it's probably slightly - but only slightly - in the "Not Dead Yet" direction - if only because i'm even less comfortable with the idea of asking a PA to assist with suicide than i was then. I still agree with the MindFreedom/Antipsychiatry Coalition position on suicide in general, for all the reasons outlined above (and that, in fact, was pretty much the origin of my whole libertarian belief system which led me to the philosophy of the Independent Living Movement in the first place), but i do have to stand with Not Dead Yet in their argument that very many of the lives considered "not worth living" are only so because of social conditions - the most obvious being life in institutions - and that those people would not want to commit suicide if the proper social support to enable them to live lives of independence, dignity and equality were available.
There is a point here relating to depression and how it gets conceptualised - the prevailing view in mainstream/"establishment" discourse seems to be that depression is "endogenous", or a result of chemical abnormalities within the individual brain, whereas a social model or "personal is political" viewpoint would argue that it is more likely to be caused by oppressive and unacceptable social conditions, whether at a home/family/immediate surroundings level or at a wider systemic level. However, like with most iterations of the "nature vs. nurture" debate, I don't find the position held by some antipsychiatrists that all depression is social in origin useful - there is solid evidence that, in some cases, depression does have a clearly biological origin, and in some of those cases, it is treatable by biochemical means (an obvious example being gender dysphoria and the extremely high success rate of treating it with hormones and surgery, as opposed to the extremely low success rate of "treating" it with "normalisation" therapy - in fact, most attempts at the latter end in suicide).
If most depression is (and I do think most depression is) caused primarily by social conditions, then the obvious, non-medical solution to the problem is to change those social conditions (which, obviously, is easier said than done). However, if someone has truly endogenous depression (that is, in social model terms, their depression is not a result of disability, but is in fact their impairment), to the extent of unrelentingly feeling suicidal, and no drug treatment is successful in having a positive effect on it (as does happen in many cases), then is forcible suicide prevention - that is, denying death to someone who truly cannot find anything positive in life - really justifiable? If someone I loved was in that position, while of course I would tell them how much I valued them and wanted them to stay alive, ultimately it would be utterly selfish, and even arguably a form of torture, to keep them alive when life was intolerable for them - and so, ultimately, I think I would, albeit deeply regretfully, if necessary help them to die.
However, this is actually a slight digression (and something that really deserves its own full post) - the purpose of this post was really to say that euthanasia is not the same thing as assisted suicide, and that, while some of the same issues tend to be present in individual cases of both, conflating them with one another is inaccurate, confusing and helps no one - indeed, it potentially endangers a lot of people, especially when the kind of arguments most properly used in regard to assisted suicide get used in clear cases of "mercy killing" (aka murder) - the Latimer case, for example - in which there is no evidence whatsoever of suicidal feelings on the part of the victim. It shows, to me, a disturbing lack of understanding of the most fundamental aspects of the ethics of life and death on the part of writers and journalists to conflate such concepts with each other...
* "recent" here now meaning a couple of months ago, as this post was written in early April and is only being posted now because of having been offline for so long...
Tuesday, May 27, 2008
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4 comments:
Personally, I don't think people should have the right to kill themselves, either.
But you're right, that is a very different issue than killing someone without their express consent.
This is a brilliant post! Every time I read your blog I end up reading something that makes me think new thoughts.
I love that!
Well.
Individuals right to choose, huh? When the choice itself is something you have to struggle for, against yourself, it's rather more complicated than that. I have a long-term relationship with death, as I fear it very much but I still recognize with my logical self that it's ultimately inevitable and also remarkably less painful than life, so I should've chosen it actively right in the moment of my birth. This means a constant argument between false hope insisted on by basic instinct, and the acknowledgement or the clean-cut objective fact that I'm not worthy of life enough to be satistfied with it. (This meaning I'm not able to do things that, IMO, make a person worthy to live. Such as do the simplest math.)
I've asked multiple people to kill me, as I was too scared to do it myself. None of the complied. One of them was a girl I loved, though she didn't have any such feelings toward me. The one and only reason of her not fulfilling my request, which I presented after her outright rejecting me, that she was trying to increase the pain of the rejection even more. And she succeeded in that. So I'm stuck between instinctual cowardice and a desire to end the pain for two years now. Stuck in a pointless argument - pointless, as death eventually comes for everyone.
Now what do you think about that?
OK... i'm not quite sure what i think about that now, but i do want to think about it and respond to you properly, perhaps tomorrow. (I'm pretty knackered right now, and not thinking very verbally.) But i wanted to let you know that i'd read your comment.
Also... i think it was you who commented on one of my past posts, asking why i was against the legal status of marriage. I do intend to address that in a post on the subject fairly soon...
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