I initially draw it in the context of the initial post, and the smothering of someone with a pillow.
Bringing religion into the conversation makes it about religion and not ethics. But in that context.. it's an easy answer. "Thou Shalt Not Kill"Originally Posted by Thorne
If you believe one religious precept, then you might as well believe them all.
Not to mention...Unforgivable sin? It's a rule of the church, not one of God's rules. Like eating fish on Fridays. (A rule that was created for economic reasons.) Even the commandment has unspoken text. It's full of loopholes. "Thou Shalt Not Kill (people of our faith.)"I probably couldn't. Should you, without having discussed it first? If the patient is terminal and knows it, and didn't discuss it? Nope. You shouldn't. If they did, then there is clearly a point in the progression of the disease where s/he can make that decision of when and still push the button themself.Originally Posted by Thorne
A very difficult question. An unexpected and sudden debilitating event. I don't have a good answer for you. I just don't know.Originally Posted by Thorne
What I do know, (with no intent to point fingers... just noting the situation...) euthanasia is against the law but we allow morphine overdoses and/or starvation to side step it. It's a hell of a loophole.
I'd be much happier with a change to the law first, and then identifying the circumstances under which direct assistance is allowed.







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