著者
久保田 顕二
出版者
埼玉工業大学
雑誌
Contexture : 教養紀要 (ISSN:09101233)
巻号頁・発行日
vol.11, pp.23-45, 1993

This paper examines three main objections raised against James Rachels' claim that the distinction between killing and letting die has no moral significance. The first objection, which is based upon a rule-utilitarian position, holds that the current moral rules forbidding active killing have the highest “utility value" in the structure of our present moral code and therefore should not be abandoned. The second objection focuses on the interpretation of the AMA statement which Rachels attacks in his argument, and says that he misunderstands the statement because it does not concern itself with the distinction as he supposes. The third objection, which Philippa Foot makes, appeals to the concept of virtue. According to the objection, the killing / letting-die distinction is morally relevant because an unjustified act of killing is contrary to “justice" whereas an unjustified act of letting die is contrary to “charity".