A natural right to die : twenty-three centuries of debate

Author(s)

    • Whiting, Raymond

Bibliographic Information

A natural right to die : twenty-three centuries of debate

Raymond Whiting

(Contributions in legal studies, no. 101)

Greenwood Press, 2002

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [203]-213) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

While other books deal with the contemporary issue of the right to die, no attempt has been made to demonstrate substantially the historic nature of this question beyond the borders of the United States. Whiting demonstrates that the right to die controversy stretches back more than two thousand years, and he explains how current attitudes and practices in the U.S. have been influenced by the legal and cultural development of the ancient western world. This perspective allows the reader to understand not only the origins of the controversy, but also the different perspectives that each age has contributed to the ongoing debate. Whiting discusses the development of legal rights within both western culture and the United States, then applies these developments to the question of the right to die. In an environment of public debate that features such emotional events as the exploits of Jack Kevorkian, the publication of how to suicide manuals, and the counterattacks of Right to Life groups, the United States is left with very few options.

Table of Contents

Preface Introduction: The "Right to Die" Debate Contemporary Attitudes About Death A Brief Modern History and Definition of Terms Attitudes Around the World Anatomy of a Right Opposition to the "Right To Die" Roman Natural Law Theory Natural Law Theory Through the Middle Ages The Development of Natural Rights Theory The Evolution of Natural Law Theory and the "Right to Die" The American Interpretation of Natural Law Natural Law and the Post-Revolutionary Era Natural Law and the Constitution: Then and Now The American Interpretation of Natural Law as it Pertains to the "Right to Die" Applications Appendix A: One Man's Decision to Die Appendix B: A Talk with a Formerly Comatose Patient Appendix C: The Universal Declaration of Human Rights References Index

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