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Single Idea 4681

[filed under theme 25. Social Practice / F. Life Issues / 2. Euthanasia ]

Full Idea

It is argued that the mass murders of the Nazi period had their small beginnings in the Nazi euthanasia programme.

Gist of Idea

The Nazi mass murders seem to have originated in their euthanasia programme

Source

Jonathan Glover (Causing Death and Saving Lives [1977], §14.2)

Book Ref

Glover,Jonathan: 'Causing Death and Saving Lives' [Penguin 1982], p.186


A Reaction

This is the 'slippery slope' problem, and it seems undeniable that killing gets easier as you do more of it (e.g. on a farm). But not all slopes are slippery, if the focus is retained on reasons and justifications.


The 11 ideas with the same theme [attitudes to mercy-killing for the very ill]:

In Utopia, legal euthanasia is considered honourable [More,T]
We only allow voluntary euthanasia to someone who is both sane and crazed by pain [Kamisar]
People will volunteer for euthanasia because they think other people want them dead [Kamisar]
The Nazi mass murders seem to have originated in their euthanasia programme [Glover]
Euthanasia is voluntary (patient's wish), or involuntary (ignore wish), or non-voluntary (no wish possible) [Glover]
Involuntary euthanasia is wrong because it violates autonomy, and it has appalling side-effects [Glover]
Maybe extreme treatment is not saving life, but prolonging the act of dying [Glover]
If it is desirable that a given patient die, then moral objections to killing them do not apply [Rachels]
It has become normal to consider passive euthanasia while condemning active euthanasia [Rachels]
Euthanasia may not involve killing, so it is 'killing or not saving, out of concern for that person' [Hooker,B]
Euthanasia is active or passive, and voluntary, non-voluntary or involuntary [Hooker,B]