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RELG 2650 Exam Questions With Complete Solutions

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RELG 2650 Exam Questions With Complete Solutions Walter - "Historical &cultural variants on the good death" How what constitutes a good death has changed in modern, Western cultures to be a more individual experience Dorff - "The Jewish Tradition: Religious Beliefs &Health Care Decisions" ...

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  • June 30, 2024
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  • 2023/2024
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RELG 2650 Exam Questions With
Complete Solutions

Walter - "Historical &cultural variants on the good death"
How what constitutes a good death has changed in modern, Western cultures to be a
more individual experience
Dorff - "The Jewish Tradition: Religious Beliefs &Health Care Decisions"
Jews may enroll in hospice program, can have painkillers that can hasten death as
along as intent is to alleviate pain, not kill. Feel good, not suffer. Celebrate your body
Harakas - "Death, Dying, and Euthanasia" (Orthodox Christian Tradition)
Serious spiritual growth can take place through suffering, there is some significant value
therefore the only good death is when the person accepts their death in moral and
spiritual purity and putting hope and trust in God. Euthanasia is either murder (w/o
consent) or suicide (w/ consent). Church and medical professionals both want to sustain
life. Ok to LET die but NOT euthanasia.
Hauerwas - "Rational Suicide"
Our lives are not our own, duty to take care of ourselves. Being faithful to God by
preserving our lives. Does NOT believe suicide can be justified even if
rational/autonomous
Meilander - "Euthanasia and the Christian Vision"
• Euthanasia is morally wrong-focuses on morality
• Focuses on aims, results, and motives (purpose/aim can be diff. even if result - death -
is same)
Evaluate aim before motive
• People have evil aims and justify them by good motives (kill to relieve suffering)
• Takes Christian theology
• Not an act of love
• Suffering can be redemptive

, • Death is no consequence: Christians don't fear death, not something +/- but something
inevitable but you should not aim for death.
Arras - "The Right to Health Care"
• Opposes euthanasia but considers it moral in some situations
• Fears a slippery slope-social consequences of euthanasia:
• Wouldn't stay inside its boundaries
• Abuse of the system
Callahan - "When Self-Determination Runs Amok"
• People argue the right of self-determination for euthanasia; but euthanasia moves into
a mutual decision between two people-one to kill, the other to die
• It's a fundamental moral wrong for one person to give his life and fate over to another-
no one should have that kind of total, final power
• The doctor would have to decide on his/her own whether the patient's life was worth
living, and that is not their/medicine's place to determine
• There is no objective way to measure the degree of one's suffering
• Consequences of euthanasia: abuse of the law, difficulty of writing and enforcing the
law, slipperiness of moral reasons for legalizing euthanasia in the first place
• There are no good moral reasons to limit euthanasia once it is legal in the first place:
does a competent person have more of a right to be killed than an incompetent person
who is also suffering?


Euthanasia would add a whole new category of killing to a society that already has too
many excuses to indulge itself in that way.
Quill - "Doctor, I want to die. Will you help me?"
Listen and learn from the patient before responding
• Follow up: physicians should try to understand the reason behind the request-the
depth of suffering, fears, superstitions, etc.
• Does the request stem from financial stress or fear of pressure on the family of the
patient?
• Is the depression reversible?
• Explore the meanings behind the statements

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