Sucide and Self-Starvation

Philosophy 59 (229):349 - 363 (1984)
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Abstract

A puzzle has been presented in the recent past in Northern Ireland: what is the correct description of the person who dies as a result of a hungerstrike? For many the simple answer is that such a person commits suicide, in that his is surely a case of . Where then is the puzzle? It is that a number of people do not see such deaths as suicides. I am not here referring to political propagandists or paramilitaries, for whom the correct description of such deaths is or (to quote advertisements in the Belfast nationalist press at the time of Bobby Sands' death). I am rather thinking of some theologians who, despite being opposed to the hunger-strike and indeed publicly condemning the whole campaign, refused to describe what the hunger-strikers did as suicide

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Citations of this work

Is “aid in dying” suicide?Philip Reed - 2019 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 40 (2):123-139.

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References found in this work

Orthodoxy.G. K. Chesterton - 2000 - The Chesterton Review 26 (1/2):11-13.
Whatever the Consequences.Jonathan Bennett - 1966 - Analysis 26 (3):83 - 102.
On Killing and Letting Die.Daniel Dinello - 1971 - Analysis 31 (3):83 - 86.

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