Tétel adatlapja
VisszaCÍMLAP

Király István

Euthanasia, or Death assisted to (its) dignity

CONTENTS, INTRODUCTION


Contents


Introduction
Chapter I. Obstacles of thinking about euthanasia
Chapter II. Thinking and inquiring euthanasia
Chapter III. The ontological metaphysics of death and euthanasia
Chapter IV. Euthanasia and interpersonality
Conclusions
References



Introduction

The book attempts to conceptualize the "ancient" issues of human death and human mortality in connection to the timely and vital subject of euthanasia. This subject forces the meditation to actually consider those ideological, ethical, deontological, legal, and metaphysical frameworks which guide from the very beginning any kind of approach to this question.

This conception - in dialogue with Heideggerian fundamental ontology and existential analytics - reveals that, on the one hand, the concepts and ethics of death are originally determined by the ontology of death, and, on the other hand, that, on this account, the question of euthanasia can only be authentically discussed in the horizon of this ontology. It is only this that may reveal to whom dying - our dying - pertains, while it also reveals our relationship to euthanasia as a determined human potentiality or final possibility. Thus euthanasia is outlined in the analysis as the possibility of becoming a mortal on the one hand, while on the other hand it appears in relation to the particularities of its existential structure, which essentially differ from the existential and ontological structure of any other possibility of dying. This is why it should not be mixed up with, or mistaken for, any of these.


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