So I challenge the two above, with between them more than 4,000 posts although not evenly divided, to do better than give a knee-jerk, "I do not think" response, and to reason it out. (I'm thinking about it - not an easy subject. It calls for at first at least some definitions.) — tim wood
Maybe it could decrease unecessary tragic suicides of older people? — Baskol1
I am respectful of your posts, T Clark, but in this case I had to call you out. I quote from the OP, "My post was responsive to the OP, which asked for an opinion. — T Clark
.Are there good arguments...? — Baskol1
Is assisted suicide for adult people who wish to die, immoral? Are there good arguments against assisted dying? Or should people have the right to die a relatively painless death if they wish to do so? Why should you keep living if life becomes unbearable and does not get better? Why do some people perceive assisted suicide as immoral? What would assisted suicide make immoral if the person really wants it? — Baskol1
Is assisted suicide for adult people who wish to die, immoral? Are there good arguments against assisted dying? Or should people have the right to die a relatively painless death if they wish to do so? Why should you keep living if life becomes unbearable and does not get better? Why do some people perceive assisted suicide as immoral? What would assisted suicide make immoral if the person really wants it? — Baskol1
"the life in question is to be lived honorably, and so as not to bring disgrace on humanity. "The moral life is at an end if it is no longer in keeping with the dignity of humanity.... The moment I can no longer live inhonor but become unworthy of life..., I can no longer live at all.... The preservation of life is, therefore, not the highest duty" (Immanuel Kant) — tim wood
Nice to know people have opinions. I have some myself. But the last time I looked - even just now - this is called The Philosophy Forum. Not "The Opinion Forum." — tim wood
It's not immoral in my view. No consensual actions are immoral. — Terrapin Station
There are no normative value facts. How do you not understand this yet? — Terrapin Station
Morality is either properly reductionist, i.e. axiomatic, or else, invariably subject to infinite regress. As Aristotle wrote, "If nothing is assumed, then nothing can be concluded". Therefore, morality always requires the explicit appointment of Kantian categorical imperatives.
In other words, any objective answer entirely depends on the axiomatic foundation for morality that you retain. — alcontali
Morality is a matter of human values. To the extent those values are universal, I guess you could say they're "absolute." But to the extent they are cultural and personal, they are not. — T Clark
I think this says more in 33 words than most of us could say in 20 or 30 times that many. And it gets the sense of the thing, and with a revealing clarity. So I could go on, but why when the best thing is just to re-read or even memorize, T Clarks' 33 words. — tim wood
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