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Life and Death

Series
Bio-Ethics Bites
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If a patient decides she doesn't want to live any longer, should she be allowed to die? Should she be allowed to kill herself?
If a patient is in no position to decide - perhaps she's in a coma - then should somebody else be able to decide to kill her? Who? Is there a moral difference between killing and allowing someone to die? And is the role of the doctor always to prolong life? Peter Singer, of Princeton University, is one of the world's leading bio-ethicists, and has been reflecting on life and death issues for four decades.

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Bio-Ethics Bites

Status Quo Bias

Suppose a genetic engineering breakthrough made it simple, safe and cheap to increase people's intelligence.
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Bio-Ethics Bites

Moral Status

A stone on the beach, we assume, has no moral status. We can kick or hammer the stone, and we have done the stone no harm. Typical adult human beings do have moral status. We shouldn't, without a very good reason, kick a man or woman.
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Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK: England & Wales; http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/
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Episode Information

Series
Bio-Ethics Bites
People
Peter Singer
Keywords
life
death
bioethics
philosophy
euthanasia
ethics
Department: Faculty of Philosophy
Date Added: 04/07/2011
Duration: 00:16:17

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