"Fatal Freedom" is an eloquent defense of every individual's
right to choose a voluntary death. The author, a renowned
psychiatrist, believes that we can speak about suicide calmly and
rationally, as he does in this book, and that we can ultimately
accept suicide as part of the human condition. By maintaining
statutes that determine that voluntary death is not legal, our
society is forfeiting one of its basic freedoms and causing the
psychiatric/medical establishment to treat individuals in a manner
that is disturbingly inhumane according to Dr. Szasz. His important
work asks and points to clear, intelligent answers to some of the
most significant ethical questions of our time:
Is suicide a voluntary act?
Should physicians be permitted to prevent it?
Should they be authorized to abet it?
The author's thoughtful analysis of these questions consistently
holds forth patient autonomy as paramount; therefore, he argues,
patients should not be prevented from exercising their free will,
nor should physicians be permitted to enter the process by
prescribing or providing the means for voluntary death.
Dr. Szasz predicts that we will look back at our present
prohibitory policies toward suicide with the same amazed
disapproval with which we regard past policies toward
homosexuality, masturbation, and birth control. This comparison
with other practices that started as sins, became crimes, then were
regarded as mental illnesses, and are now becoming more widely
accepted, opens up the discussion and understanding of suicide in a
historical context. The book explores attitudes toward suicide held
by the ancient Greeks and Romans, through early Christianity and
the Reformation, to the advent of modern psychiatry and
contemporary society as a whole. Our tendency to define disapproved
behaviors as diseases has created a psychiatric establishment that
exerts far too much influence over how and when we choose to die.
Just as we have come to accept the individual's right to birth
control, so too must we accept his right to death control before we
can call our society humane or free.
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