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Journal Article

Citation

Hester DM. J. Med. Humanit. 1998; 19(4): 279-298.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1998, Springer)

DOI

10.1023/a:1024936926859

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

In this paper I use William James's understanding of " significance" in life to show that for certain patients euthanasia and assisted suicide can be importantly meaningful acts that family, friends, and health care professionals must acknowledge and even, at times, aid in bringing to fruition. Dying with meaning is transformative. It reshapes the lives of others that are left behind, giving to their lives new groundings by engaging them in the meaning of dying for us. For the patient, dying with meaning takes the seemingly formless void in the abyss of death and gives it a significant purpose in the last stages of life itself; it turns potential nothingness into actual significance. To the extent that we outsiders do not help the dying we condemn terminally ill patients to a meaningless existence until they die. © 1998 Human Sciences Press, Inc.


Language: en

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