The rationality of suicide
This paper discusses the rationality of suicide. Specifically, it will be argued that there are certain circumstances in which suicide can be rational. I will argue that Physician-Assisted Suicide, Voluntary Euthanasia, and Self-Accomplished Deaths are all forms of suicide. Throughout the paper, I w...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-735412019-12-10T11:18:24Z The rationality of suicide Chandrasekaran, Vaishgnavi Li Chenyang School of Humanities and Social Sciences DRNTU::Humanities::Ethics This paper discusses the rationality of suicide. Specifically, it will be argued that there are certain circumstances in which suicide can be rational. I will argue that Physician-Assisted Suicide, Voluntary Euthanasia, and Self-Accomplished Deaths are all forms of suicide. Throughout the paper, I will respond to some objections to the rationality of these forms of suicide. These objections will include ‘Respecting Dignity and Humanity’, ‘Slippery Slope’, the presence of mental illness, inability to think clearly, ‘Two-State Requirement’ and the ‘Crystal Ball’ account. I will argue that none of them succeed as a justificatory reason in classifying suicide as an irrational act. This will therefore allow for the conclusion that suicide is indeed rational in certain circumstances. Bachelor of Arts 2018-03-29T03:05:41Z 2018-03-29T03:05:41Z 2018 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/73541 en Nanyang Technological University 45 p. application/pdf |
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DRNTU::Humanities::Ethics Chandrasekaran, Vaishgnavi The rationality of suicide |
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This paper discusses the rationality of suicide. Specifically, it will be argued that there are certain circumstances in which suicide can be rational. I will argue that Physician-Assisted Suicide, Voluntary Euthanasia, and Self-Accomplished Deaths are all forms of suicide. Throughout the paper, I will respond to some objections to the rationality of these forms of suicide. These objections will include ‘Respecting Dignity and Humanity’, ‘Slippery Slope’, the presence of mental illness, inability to think clearly, ‘Two-State Requirement’ and the ‘Crystal Ball’ account. I will argue that none of them succeed as a justificatory reason in classifying suicide as an irrational act. This will therefore allow for the conclusion that suicide is indeed rational in certain circumstances. |
author2 |
Li Chenyang |
author_facet |
Li Chenyang Chandrasekaran, Vaishgnavi |
format |
Final Year Project |
author |
Chandrasekaran, Vaishgnavi |
author_sort |
Chandrasekaran, Vaishgnavi |
title |
The rationality of suicide |
title_short |
The rationality of suicide |
title_full |
The rationality of suicide |
title_fullStr |
The rationality of suicide |
title_full_unstemmed |
The rationality of suicide |
title_sort |
rationality of suicide |
publishDate |
2018 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10356/73541 |
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1681036096786399232 |