Connecting the Dots:
Sanctity of Life Threatened on Many Fronts
By Wesley J. Smith
National Review; January 24, 2003
Jack Kevorkian shocked consciences and turned stomachs a few years ago
when he advocated using assisted-suicide victims as subjects of medical
experimentation, a process he planned to call "obitiatry."
Even though Kevorkian is now in prison in Michigan, it appears that his
idea of medically experimenting on the bodies of dying people is gaining
adherents in the bioethics and medical research communities. Indeed, if
a
story in the January 19 Pittsburgh Gazette is true, it appears that such
research is already being conducted.
Gazette science editor Byron Spice's story primarily concerned the
recent
use by medical researchers of the bodies of persons who had been
declared"brain dead." Many may be shocked at the idea, but assuming a proper
diagnosis, a "brain dead" person is as dead as someone whose heart and
lungs have permanently ceased functioning. However, unlike other
cadavers,
the body of a person declared dead by neurological criteria -- meaning
the
whole brain and each of its constituent parts have permanently ceased
all
brain function -- is kept functioning temporarily, usually to permit
time
to procure organs for transplantation. Since these are the bodies of the
dead and not the living, assuming proper regulation, it would seem this
research would be as appropriate as that using other corpses.
The real bombshell in Spice's story concerned the potential that
catastrophically ill or injured people are also being used in research,
the "very sick people whose life support or drug therapy is about to be
withdrawn." Indeed, according to Spice, the bodies of "nearly dead
patients" have already been used in researching a new cancer drug. But
nearly dead isn't dead. Someone who is very sick, whose life support is
about to be withdrawn, isn't dead -- he's living.
To understand the full import of this story we need to connect some
important dots by considering the context in which it arises.
Unbeknownst
to many, the sanctity-of-human-life ethic is under sustained attack.
Indeed, the predominant view of contemporary bioethics rejects the view
that life is sacrosanct simply and merely because it is human. Rather,
what matters morally is whether a life -- be it animal, human, space
alien, or machine -- is a "person," a status that must be earned by
possessing relevant cognitive capacities.
This subjective view of life -- as opposed to the objective approach
contained in the sanctity-of-life ethic -- strips some humans of their
moral equality and threatens to transform them into the moral equivalent
of a lab animal or a natural resource. This was the very point made by
Georgetown University bioethicist Tom L. Beauchamp in the December 1999
Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal, one of the most influential
bioethics
publications in the world. Since "many humans lack properties of
personhood or are less than full persons," Beauchamp wrote, they are"equal or inferior in moral standing" to some animals. As a consequence,
such "unlucky humans" might be available for use in the same ways as are"relevantly similar nonhumans. For example, they might be aggressively
used as human research subjects and sources of organs."
In a similar vein, philosopher and bioethicist R. G. Frey, of Bowling
Green University, has explicitly asserted that, for humans as well as
animals, the "value of life is a function of its quality." This the
so-called quality-of-life ethic leads to very dark conclusions. "Because
some human lives fare drastically below the quality of life of normal
(adult) human life," Frey writes, "we must face the prospect that the
lives of some perfectly healthy animals have a higher quality and
greater
value than the lives of some humans. And we must face this prospect,
with
all the implications it may have for the use of these unfortunate humans
by others" including "the use of defective humans in [medical]
research."
This kind of thinking is even more common in the organ-transplant
community. In order to increase the number of vital organs available for
transplantation, some bioethicists and transplant professionals want to
redefine death to include a diagnosis of permanent coma or
unconsciousness. If that were done, the thousands of people in comas at
any given time could have their organs procured. Pending such a
redefinition, some have suggested that non-vital tissues and organs be
procured, such as corneas and single kidneys.
Meanwhile, Norman Fost, director of the Program in Medical Ethics at the
University of Wisconsin at Madison, has opined that we should be able to
take vital organs from the living, even if doing so would kill them: "My
contention is that that there is ample precedent in the law and good
moral
justification for removing [vital] organs from persons who are not
legally
dead," Fost wrote. Such procurement would not be limited to the
unconscious -- it could also include conscious people who are terminally
ill, whose organ harvesting before dying would be considered "part of
their terminal care."
These same attitudes drive much of the thinking of bioethicists and
medical researchers in the embryonic-stem-cell and human-cloning
debates.
Since embryos are not sentient, the thinking goes, the fact that they
are
human is not morally relevant. Indeed, it is their very membership in
the
human species that makes them so attractive for use in medical research
and as a source of what could be a very profitable commodity: human
embryonic stem cells.
The desire to harvest embryonic stem cells has led bioethicists, patient
groups, ill and disabled movie stars, and politicians to seek the
legalization of human cloning for biomedical research. At present, most
of
these cloning advocates would require all human clones to be destroyed
while still in the embryonic stage of development. But this seems
primarily a political expedient rather than a never-to-be-violated moral
boundary. Indeed, to the applause of the biomedical research community
and
cloning advocates, the New Jersey state senate recently passed S. 1909,
a
radical human-cloning-for-biomedical-research legalization bill.
Tellingly, S. 1909 would not prohibit the implantation of cloned embryos
into women's wombs. It would not outlaw their gestation into fetuses. In
fact, it only requires human clones to be killed before they reach the"newborn" stage of life, meaning that New Jersey is, quite literally, on
the verge of permitting the creation of -- and experimentation upon --
cloned human babies through the ninth month of pregnancy.
Throughout life's spectrum -- from the beginning to the end -- the value
of human life is increasingly being measured through a distorting,
utilitarian prism. This is happening a little bit here, and a little bit
there, by small steps. But just as a roaring river is created by the
coming together of many streams, our current piecemeal deconstruction of
the sanctity-of-life ethic is leading toward an explicit hierarchy of
human life that would permit some to be exploited and destroyed for the
benefit of others deemed to have superior moral worth. Seen in this light,
research on the near-dead as if they were already corpses is but one
short
chapter in a much longer book. |