Wednesday, September 4, 2019
Its Time to Stop the Commerce in Death :: Euthanasia Physician Assisted Suicide
It's Time to Stop the Commerce in Death     Ã     One of the symptoms of a society in the grips of moral crisis is a     tendency to refer to reprehensible acts by soft-sounding euphemisms, by     names that do not directly excite human qualms or agitate scruples and     that evade precise reflection on the reality of certain situations. For     example, in our modern lexicon, abortion is called "freedom of choice,"     sexual libertinage is dubbed "alternative lifestyles," and certain     forms of genocide-in-slow-motion can be made to seem more acceptable     under the name "family planning."     Ã       Such are the mental tricks and the "word magic" employed to quiet the     normal functioning of our consciences. Sadly, they work on a great many     people for long periods of time. Like certain narcotics, they dull the     moral senses and can eventually blot out such feelings completely.     Ã       This being so, let us examine a concept that is very old, that     disappeared from civilized life for almost two millennia, and that has     now begun its return, lifting itself ever higher on the distant     horizon, like a huge, menacing, black cloud. That concept is known as     euthanasia.     Ã       "Good Death"     Ã       The English word euthanasia is derived from the Greek and means,     literally, "good death." According to its oldest meaning, it signifies     merely the relatively painless, gentle passage of someone from this     life to the next, without necessarily any human inference or     intervention.Ã   Even in the Christian tradition, we sometimes hear  the     term "good death" used in the sense that the departed person died at     peace with himself, with his family, and with God.     Ã       However, an alternative definition, more in accord with contemporary     usages, generally suggests something quite different: It indicates the     bringing about of the death of a human being, either by suicide or     killing, ostensibly to prevent extreme physical pain or mental anguish.      Euthanasia, according to the teaching of every traditional Christian     group, is looked upon as suicide or murder, plain and simple, and,     until recently, was universally condemned in all societies whose roots     grew out of Christianity. This teaching holds that a supposedly worthy     end, in this case the termination of pain and suffering, never,     according to traditional moral norms, justifies immoral or unethical     means.     Ã       With the rise of revolutionary ideologies in the late 18th century,     Darwinistic philosophies in the following century, and the concomitant     decline in fidelity to Christian teaching, especially among educated     					    
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