PVS Patients: The New Human Guinea Pigs
First, utilitarian bioethicists wanted to redefine people with PVS as dead so they could be treated as so many organ farms ripe for the harvest. Now, several articles published in the misnamed Journal of Medical Ethics urge that patients diagnosed with PVS be used to as guinea pigs to see whether animal organs can be safely transplanted into humans, a field of study known as xenotransplantation.
I haven't read the whole articles, but plan to as soon as I can get my hands on them. But the abstracts are bad enough. See, here, here, here, and here.
The gist of the argument these writers make seems to be that if people consent ahead of time, once they become profoundly cognitively impaired, doctors should be allowed to take out their kidneys (perhaps transplanting them into someone else?) and replace them with pig or other animal organs to see if xenotransplantation is "safe."
This is deeply and profoundly wrong on so many levels, that I will not expound upon it fully here but will explore the matter fully in a more appropriate venue. For now, let me just state this: When we lose sight of the crucial ethical presumption that all humans have intrinsic value simply and merely because they are human, when we say that the value of a life depends on its presumed quality, we open the door to the worst forms of oppression and exploitation.
Consent ahead of time has nothing to do with it. The Nuremberg Code taught us that such human experiments are an ethical abomination. How soon we forget the lessons of history.
HT: BioEdge


6 Comments:
Eugenics: It's baaaaack!
I for one don't lump abortion in with the other "bioethic" issues because, quite honestly, the motivation by those who want to criminalize it aren't actually motivated by preserving fetal life but are motivated instead by a desire to curb women's rights.
The problem with abortion is the fetus is almost always dependent on the woman for survival. When a woman has an unwanted pregnancy, forcing her to have a child goes right against her rights. The woman's rights are always going to take precedence regardless of the situation, regardless even if abortion is illegal.
It's an entirely different ball of wax when talking about the disabled and the elderly, who ARE human beings legally and morally. Their rights are being violated in the attempt to kill them by the medical establishment.
It's clever by the right-to-lifers to lump embryos and fetuses with the disabled and the elderly, but some of us out here know there's a huge difference.
Susan: Thanks for writing. One of my passions is to unite pro life and pro choice, who disagree about abortion, around the issues about which I advocate. Certainly, this is one!
Susan: "...those who want to criminalize it aren't actually motivated by preserving fetal life but are motivated instead by a desire to curb women's rights."
Susan, you're being quite unfair here. Do you really think that the entire pro-life movement is about nothing but oppressing women? That's about as well-founded as claiming that the pro-choice movement is motivated by feminists' hatred of children. You may disagree with their position, but at least be fair enough to assume good faith on the part of most pro-lifers.
Susan: "It's clever by the right-to-lifers to lump embryos and fetuses with the disabled and the elderly..."
It's not "clever", it's simply logically consistent given their basic premises. You may hold different ones, but that doesn't make their arguments into sophistry or some kind of con.
Now, I will agree completely that one can oppose euthanasia yet not oppose abortion, and rhetoric that always links the two has the danger of driving away liberals who would be willing to combine forces in areas of agreement. One of the strengths of Wesley's approach is that he takes pains to show that euthanasia is not merely a "pro-life" issue but rather one that transcends stereotypical boundaries.
"I for one don't lump abortion in with the other 'bioethic' issues because, quite honestly, the motivation by those who want to criminalize it aren't actually motivated by preserving fetal life but are motivated instead by a desire to curb women's rights."
Wow! It's amazing how you were able to climb into their heads like that and learn what their "real motivations" are. Howja do that?
Okay: Time to put a stop to the discussion of abortion. Take it outside, as the barkeeper once said. Thanks.
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