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When Suicide is not a Self -Killing: Advance Decisions and Psychological Discontinuity-Part I.

Suzanne E Dowie
Published in: Cambridge quarterly of healthcare ethics : CQ : the international journal of healthcare ethics committees (2024)
Derek Parfit's view of 'personal identity' raises questions about whether advance decisions refusing life-saving treatment should be honored in cases where a patient loses psychological continuity; it implies that these advance decisions would not be self-determining at all. Part I of this paper argues that this assessment of personal identity undermines the distinction between suicide and homicide. However, rather than accept that an unknown metaphysical 'further fact' underpins agential unity, one can accept Parfit's view but offer a different account of what it implies morally: that the social and legal bases for ascribing a persisting 'personal identity' maintain the distinction between homicide and suicide.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • mental health
  • case report
  • clinical evaluation