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Jason T Eberl, I Am My Brother’s Keeper: Communitarian Obligations to the Dying Person, Christian bioethics: Non-Ecumenical Studies in Medical Morality, Volume 24, Issue 1, April 2018, Pages 38–58, https://doi.org/10.1093/cb/cbx016
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Abstract
Contemporary arguments concerning the permissibility of physician-assisted suicide [PAS], or suicide in general, often rehearse classical arguments over whether individual persons have a fundamental right based on autonomy to determine their own death, or whether the community has a legitimate interest in individual members’ welfare that would prohibit suicide. I explicate historical arguments pertaining to PAS aligned with these poles. I contend that an ethical indictment of PAS entails moral duties on the part of one’s community to provide effective means of ameliorating physical and existential suffering. I further elucidate how such duties have been affirmed by the Roman Catholic Church. My aim is to provide reasons why the expanding legalization of PAS should not preclude social investment in effective palliative care and the provision of a communal presence to the dying as they confront their subjectively experienced suffering.