Dworkin, Ronald

Assisted Suicide: The Philosophers' Brief - 2003.


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States may protect individuals from irrational, ill-informed, pressured, or unstable decisions to hasten their own death. To that end, states may regulate and limit the assistance that doctors may give individuals who express a wish to die. But states may not deny people the opportunity to demonstrate, through reasonable procedures that their decision to die is indeed informed, stable, and fully free. Denying that opportunity to terminally ill patients who are in agonizing pain or otherwise doomed to an existence they regard as intolerable could only be justified on the basis of a religious or ethical conviction about the value or meaning of life itself. This, a liberal state cannot do. If the Supreme Court of the United States denies this opportunity to American citizens, its decision could only be justified by the momentous proposition that an American citizen does not, after all, have the right, even in principle, to live and die in the light of his own religious and ethical beliefs, his own convictions about why his life is valuable and where its value lies.