Open to Debate

Legalize Assisted Suicide?

4 snips
Jan 30, 2026
Peter Singer, utilitarian bioethicist advocating autonomy and reduced suffering; Andrew Solomon, psychologist and author sharing personal experience for regulated aid in dying; Daniel Sulmasy, physician-ethicist warning legalization undermines human dignity; Ilora Finlay, palliative physician stressing clinical uncertainty and coercion risks. They debate autonomy, safeguards, clinical judgment, slippery slopes, and physician integrity.
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ANECDOTE

A Daughter's Controlled, Personal Death

  • Andrew Solomon describes his mother's choice to have control over her death during cancer treatment.
  • He recounts that having the pills gave her control and preserved her identity in dying.
INSIGHT

Autonomy And Regulated Precedent

  • Peter Singer argues that autonomy, lack of worthwhile future life, and family grief can justify aid in dying in narrow cases.
  • He cites long experience in the Netherlands and Oregon to claim legalization need not cause a slippery slope.
ANECDOTE

Distress Reversed Through Care

  • Ilora Finlay recounts David, a 36-year-old with a spinal tumor who initially sought assisted suicide but later lost that wish.
  • She says her care helped him regain will to live and he contacted her 11 years later.
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