Publication | Closed Access
Brain Death—An Opposing Viewpoint
95
Citations
8
References
1979
Year
Palliative CareMedical EthicsForensic MedicineTotal DestructionEnd-of-life IssueThanatologyProposed LegislationBioethicsBrain InjuryNeuroscienceNeurologyTerminal IllnessCerebral Blood FlowNeuropathologyMedicineDeath StudiesDeath InvestigationTotal Brain Function
Recent and proposed legislation to establish "brain-related" criteria of death has uniformly confounded irreversible cessation of total brain function with the death of the human person. Much of the confusion comes from widespread misunderstanding of how the word "death" is used and what it means. Cessation of total brain function, whether irreversible or not, is not necessarily linked to total destruction of the brain or to the death of the person. Further, to take vital organs or to otherwise treat people as though they were dead already on the basis of these recent criteria is morally unacceptable to most Orthodox Jews and Christians.
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