Moral ortothanasia and the right to die
A multinarrative approach
Based upon a historical analysis of death and
dying in different contexts and reflecting on the interfaces between
religion, philosophy, and medicine, this paper elaborates on the
ethical quandaries associated with the process of dying from three
different narrative perspectives: first, second, and third person. A
sound pragmatics of care is developed when these three narrative
voices are integrated into a meaningful whole. The process becomes
then a true ortothanasia: dying is in harmony with personal
expectations and desires, the needs of relevant
others and the regulations implicit or
explicit in society. It is contended that beliefs and
practices designed to fit into one of the narratives may not
necessarily serve to explain phenomena in other discourses. A right
ortothanasia demands an hermeneutics of death and a dialectics of
dying.
Article outline
- Death and dying
- Ethics as narrative
- Discursive modes
- Storytelling, death and dying
- The integration of discourses
- Axiographic analysis of death and dying as an integration of
narratives
- Pragmatics of care
- Ortothanasia and the right to die
-
References