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KMID : 1172020090100020035
Journal of Korean Bioethics Association
2009 Volume.10 No. 2 p.35 ~ p.47
A Study on Withdrawing of Life-Sustaining Treatment in the Perspective of Bioethics: Focusing on Bernhard Haring¡¯s ¡°Perspective of Freedom¡±
Kwon Hyeok-Nam

Abstract
This article presents Bernhard Haring¡¯s ¡°Perspective of Freedom¡± as a important theological insight in the euthanasia debate. Haring has anticipated the inadequacy of various arguments against euthanasia and has seen the need for Catholic theology to articulate an argument drawn directly from its own theological sources. As a renewal of Catholic moral theology, Haring¡¯s work is significant in its use of freedom and fidelity as primary virtues which define the goal of moral agency. Haring¡¯s argument has a certain advantage for the purpose of christian moral theology, the main advantage being that it explicitly engages the question of suffering and human freedom and provides a context within which the moral meaning of suffering can be discussed. Haring suggests that a convincing argument against euthanasia can only be made in the ¡°perspective of freedom.¡± Haring¡¯s work shows how issues in medical ethics may be evaluated by assessing their impact on freedom. In his moral theology the maximization of freedom is used as a point of reference. Haring argues that human freedom must respect the meaning of creaturely finitude, and that the realm of human freedom, stewardship, and dominion cannot extend to control over death and mortality. Euthanasia, Haring argues, is wrong because it aborts the meaning of human life and freedom. Freedom, he indicates, can have meaning in the acceptance of death but not in the control of death.
KEYWORD
Bernhard Haring, medical ethics, freedom, illness, death
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