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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
3 pages in length. With the agonizing demise of Terri Schiavo, the question of what defines death has come to the forefront of philosophical and medical debate. When is a person dead? When they can no longer take care of themselves? When they have no quality of life? When there is no hope for reversal of deterioration of brain and other organs should the individual awaken from a coma? Indeed, while one might surmise how the definition of death is quite finite and straightforward, it has proven to be anything but. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
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File: LM1_TLCDeathDef.rtf
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can no longer take care of themselves? When they have no quality of life? When there is no hope for reversal of deterioration of brain and other organs
should the individual awaken from a coma? Indeed, while one might surmise how the definition of death is quite finite and straightforward, it has proven to be anything but.
II. ARGUMENT Being that a very vague and indistinct definition of death is the state of no longer being alive, it stands to reason how there is much more
to the aspect of demise than meets the eye. For instance, a person might be brain dead but is still alive by virtue of technological advancement in medical application
- but is that alive in the human sense or merely artificially? A person who has a heart attack and is not revived for several minutes is agreed to
be dead for that brief time period, however, he is ultimately brought back to life and lives another dozen years before dying for good. He was not breathing during
his short absence from mortal existence, which many believe is the primary prerequisite for death, but the fact that he was revived and once again began drawing air into his
lungs illustrates how this is not necessarily a definitive component of being dead. As such, "the boundary between life and death is socially created; it cannot be easily ascertained
or read, even by the most sophisticated brain imaging technology" (Batchelder, 2005, p. 123). What, therefore, is the clinical definition of death within the ethical element of nursing and medicine?
For a long time, death simply meant "the cessation of both heartbeat and breathing, known as cardiorespiratory arrest" (Ingersoll, 2002); now, however, it has taken on an entirely ambiguous
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