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Essay
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Multiple Choice
A) he kills rather than lets the patient die.
B) his refusal to act is subject to moral appraisal.
C) he is bound by the American Medical Association's official statement of ethics.
D) there are legal consequences attached to his behavior.
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Multiple Choice
A) The physician
B) The hospital's committee on medical ethics
C) The hospital chaplain
D) The patient or the patient's immediate family
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True/False
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True/False
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True/False
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True/False
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True/False
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Multiple Choice
A) Never or almost never
B) Whenever the patient sincerely and repeatedly requests that such action be taken
C) As soon as the decision to cease treatment has been made
D) When the patient loses the capacity to communicate
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Multiple Choice
A) The difference between killing someone and letting them die is not in itself a morally relevant issue.
B) We have a moral obligation to refrain from killing others but no obligation to intervene to prevent them from dying.
C) Neither active nor passive euthanasia should be thought of as killing.
D) Euthanasia is never permissible when the patient is a minor.
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Multiple Choice
A) It leads to decisions about life and death being made on irrelevant grounds.
B) It leaves decisions about life and death solely in the hands of doctors.
C) It encourages costly and ineffective efforts to prolong the lives of terminally ill patients.
D) None of the above
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Multiple Choice
A) the intentional termination of one's life by another person to relieve pain and suffering.
B) the cessation of the employment of "extraordinary means" to prolong one's life.
C) intentionally causing a patient's death against the patient's wishes.
D) the refusal to treat a patient against the patient's wishes.
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True/False
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Multiple Choice
A) It wisely upholds the traditional moral distinction between active and passive euthanasia.
B) Its acceptance of passive euthanasia draws us into dangerous moral territory.
C) It unwisely opposes active euthanasia, which is sometimes morally preferable to passive euthanasia.
D) It leaves far too much to the discretion of the patient and the patient's immediate family.
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True/False
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Multiple Choice
A) Moral intuitions supported by sound philosophical reasoning
B) The hold that religious dogma continues to have even on those who understand themselves as nonbelievers
C) The fact that most actual cases of killing are more reprehensible than most actual cases of letting a person die
D) All of the above
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Multiple Choice
A) doctor becoming part of the causal chain in the former but not in the latter.
B) American Medical Association saying there is a difference between the former and the latter.
C) law saying there is a difference between the former and the latter.
D) None of the above
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True/False
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