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Defending Euthanasia Essay

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Margaret Somerville, who has authored, edited, and co-edited a number of books and newspaper articles opposing the use of euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide and who also is the Samuel Gale Professor of Law, Professor in the Faculty of Medicine, and Founding Director of the Centre for Medicine, Ethics, and Law at McGill University, Montreal, wrote the internet article titled “Against Euthanasia.” In the article Somerville blatantly states that any type of euthanasia or physician-assisted suicide is completely and totally wrong under all circumstances. She offers the two major reasons why she considers the practice of euthanasia to be entirely immoral and unacceptable. The first main reason that is given is, “that it is wrong for …show more content…

Somerville’s piece presents seemingly legitimate points against euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide. One point that advocates of euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide can to some extent agree on is that abuse and over use are inevitable and unstoppable. Both parties understand that if euthanasia is legalized that there will be no perfect way of preventing the unlawful use of euthanasia no matter how many laws, safeguards, and obstacles could be written and put in place. This can be seen currently in almost every law. One example would be that it is illegal to rob a person or place, but no matter how many obstacles are created to prevent robbery it still occurs. So in the same way, the prohibited use of euthanasia would be inevitable no matter what is done to prevent it. This inevitability though does not mean it will be rampant. Due to the nature of euthanasia and how it is done it would be practically impossible for doctors to unlawfuly euthanize patients without being caught. The way that euthanasia is performed is its own deterrent.
Now concerning the over use of euthanasia, “On March 27, 1998, an Oregon woman in her eighties who was near death from breast cancer legally ended her life with barbiturates supplied by a physician. Another fourteen persons would join her in utilizing the Oregon Death with Dignity Act (ODDA) in its first year of operation.” If Somerville is right about the over use of

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