Deck 7: Euthanasia and Physician-Assisted Death
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Deck 7: Euthanasia and Physician-Assisted Death
1
Rachels believes that passive euthanasia is morally preferable to active euthanasia.
False
2
One advantage of the durable power of attorney over the living will is that the durable power of attorney allows a surrogate to exercise control over novel and unanticipated situations.
True
3
On the Roman Catholic view there is a moral obligation to continue treatment when a person is medically hopeless.
False
4
A utilitarian will always support the view that euthanasia is morally acceptable.
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5
The oldest form of advance directive is a living will.
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6
A persistent vegetative state is synonymous with brain death.
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7
Passive euthanasia is sometimes referred to as an act of commission.
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8
J. Gay-Williams argues that there are no good moral arguments for not allowing patient-requested euthanasia.
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9
Active euthanasia is sometimes referred to as an act of omission.
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10
James Rachels believes that when a patient is allowed to die (at the patient's request), it is the patient's disease that causes the death not the doctor who takes the patient off life support.
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11
In the 1970s and 1980s there were four basic views of what it is to be dead.
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12
James Rachels supports the opinion that there is a significant moral difference between active and passive euthanasia.
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13
Ross holds that we always have a strong prima facie duty not to kill any sentient being.
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14
Well-being and health are the same concept.
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15
Peter Singer believes that the utilitarian case for voluntary euthanasia is exceedingly weak.
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