"Why is it okay to euthanize a dying pet but not a dying human?".
https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/al ... re-compare
Looking forward to your thoughts since we all come from different perspectives. Thanks!
Moderator: Global Moderator

I can understand your point above. Regarding the 2nd paragraph though, I'm assuming a pet would fall under your "Euthanizing someone who is incapable of making the decision due to advanced age and infirmity". Wouldn't this state it's an ethical gray-area for euthanizing a pet because they can't ask for it themselves?Pointedstick wrote: I think euthanasia of a suffering human can be absolutely moral, especially if we're talking about the case where someone is lucid enough to request it themselves. I've known a lot of people who talk about how it would be nice to be able to choose their time and place of death if the alternative were a slow, lingering degradation.
Euthanizing someone who is incapable of making the decision due to advanced age and infirmity is a whole different can of worms, of course. But I think if a person wants it and is mentally capable of expressing as much, it seems like granting that request is only humane.





I prefer "caretaker" since you can't literally own animals or any other life form for that matter. Reframing how you view and feel about your relationship to animals opens up wonderful new insights, such as cloned meat or a stuffed likeness of your dog (j/k).Pointedstick wrote: It's true that pets can't ask and wouldn't have the self-awareness to consider it. But I don't consider an animal pet to be on the same moral plane as a human. I have a 10 year old dog. She is wonderful, but let's face it: she is my slave. I bought her for money. I am referred to as her "owner." I control everything about her life, and she lives at my pleasure. I love her to death, but she's not morally equal to my kids. She's my enslaved animal companion. I don't see it as much of a gray area to euthanize her when she becomes too old to do any of the things she considers fun.

Death is pretty tricky to define with the way science is pushing the limits these days. There must be some kind a waiting period or some kind of organic finality to snap the astral cord once and for all, otherwise it should not humanly be possible to bring pigs or dogs back to life 30-60 minutes after you literally "kill" them. Or what about those seeds that are a million of years old that still sprout? How is that even possible? Are they conscious of their eternal hell or is it just a empty shell up to the point it detects water? How can it even detect water without being alive after a million years? Was it technically dead for a million years or just in semi-alive stasis? Madness.dualstow wrote: A new National Geographic came in the mail today. There's a whole section on people coming back from the dead after many hours without a heartbeat. I'm sure there are pages on feeding tubes and DNRs.