Fatal freedom : the ethics and politics of suicide
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Fatal freedom : the ethics and politics of suicide
Syracuse University Press, 2002
- : pbk
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Note
Originally published: Westport, CT : Praeger, 1999
Includes bibliographical references and indexes
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This is a defence of every individual's right to choose a voluntary death. By maintaining statutes that determine that voluntary death is not legal, Thomas Szasz believes that our society is forfeiting one of its basic freedoms and causing the psychiatric medical establishment to treat individuals in a manner that is disturbingly inhumane. Society's penchant for defining behaviour it terms objectionable as a disease has created a psychiatric establishment that exerts far too much influence over how and when we choose to die. In a compelling argument, which addresses the most significant ethical issues of our time, Szasz compares suicide to other practices that historically began as sins, became crimes, and then mental illnesses. This book answers some of the most significant ethical questions of our time: is suicide a volutary act of an act of mental illness? Should physicians be permitted to prevent it? Should they be authorized to abet it?
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