Deciding on Death: Conventions and Contestations in the Context of Disability

被引:0
作者
Margrit Shildrick
机构
[1] Queen’s University Belfast,SSSPSW
来源
Journal of Bioethical Inquiry | 2008年 / 5卷
关键词
Euthanasia; Disability; Deleuze;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Conflicts between bioethicists and disability theorists often arise over the permissibility of euthanasia and physician assisted suicide. Where mainstream bioethicists propose universalist guidelines that will direct action across a range of effectively disembodied situations, and take for granted that moral agency requires autonomy, feminist bioethicists demand a contextualisation of the circumstances under which moral decision making is conducted, and stress a more relational view of autonomy that does not require strict standards of independent agency. Nonetheless, neither traditional nor feminist perspectives have fully engaged with the critique of disabled people that they are consistently subjected to discriminatory, even life-threatening, practice and policy in biomedical and health care. The paper revisits some of the issues that drive the often highly polarised debate between bioethicists and disability theorists around the question of end of life decisions involving disabled people. While many bioethicists have doubtless been indifferent to the difference that disability makes, I am also concerned that the very proper demand of disability activists and theorists to scrutinise all end of life decisions for signs of discrimination and even violence has segued into something damagingly restrictive that silences internal dissension and stifles external debate. Given that euthanasia and physician assisted suicide may be issues where conventional argument on either side will founder on deeply felt convictions, I make the radical move to speculate on an entirely different, quasi-Deleuzian, approach to the value of life in order to shake up entrenched positions, and begin to think differently.
引用
收藏
页码:209 / 219
页数:10
相关论文
共 25 条
[1]  
Donchin A.(2001)Understanding autonomy relationally: toward a reconfiguration of bioethical principles Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 26 365-386
[2]  
Anderson P. S.(2003)Autonomy, Vulnerability and Gender Feminist Theory 4 149-164
[3]  
McBryde-Johnson H.(2003)Unspeakable conversations: Or, how I spent one day as a token cripple at Princeton University New York Times Magazine 16 50-55
[4]  
Lillie T. H.(2005)End-of-life issues and persons with disabilities Journal of Disability Policy Studies 16 2-5
[5]  
Werth J. L.(1991)A thousand trails to work with Deleuze SubStance 66 10-23
[6]  
Colombat A. P.(2004)The difference that difference makes: bioethics and the challenge of “disability” Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 29 697-716
[7]  
Koch T.(1998)Distracted by disability Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 7 77-87
[8]  
Asch A.(2005)End games: euthanasia under interminable scrutiny Bioethics 19 523-536
[9]  
Parker M.(1999)“Fatal practices”: a feminist analysis of physician-assisted suicide and euthanasia Hypatia 14 1-25
[10]  
Raymond D.(1999)Euthanasia in Spain: the public debate after Ramon Sampedro’s case Bioethics 13 426-432