Abstract
Ethical issues surrounding the act of suicide are confounded by the difference between the complexity of suicide and the popular and professional clinical view of suicide. In elaborating these different views, it is shown that the dominant view of suicide as a manifestation of mental illness has a weak scientific base and limits our efforts at understanding the multi-faceted concept “suicide.” In particular, the rationality of those who kill themselves is examined. Finally, the right of a person in our society to take his or her own life is supported; the state is shown to have no base for a compelling interest in preventing suicide.
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Arthur L Kobler is a psychotherapist in private practice and is a member of the National Board of American Civil Liberties Union.
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Kobler, A.L. Suicide: Right and reason. Bioethics Quarterly 2, 46–55 (1980). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00917056
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00917056