But my question is: If someone isn't willing to donate their organs, what right do they have to demand someone else's?
Saturday, March 8, 2008
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A blog for Theory of Knowledge students at North Central High School
3 comments:
This issue presents real challenges. Consider just a few of the possible reasons why some might not sign their organ donor card:
1. They do not have a driver's license.
2. They did not realize that they could donate their organs.
3. Their own organs are not of a healthy enough status to be worth donating.
4. They simply forgot to sign.
Furthermore, and this gets into ways of knowing, how would you judge whether or not someone were being truthful in his or her stated willingness to donate? A person could easily lie, sign the card, move up on the list to receive an organ, yet never have intended to donate his or her own.
I never thought about the lying thing. but i thought since move people who are willing to donate their organs up on the list will make more people willing to donate their organs. is that what we need the most? to have more people donate their organs? This might be unfair to some people (ex. people with organs that are not healthy enough to donate), but if more people can be saved by the increasing numbers of organ donators, then i believe the advantage overwhelmed the disadvantage.
I mentioned i didn't support a new rule concerning this issue...and that still stands. I disagree with the people that choose not to donate an organ for any of the reasons listed above--or a religious reason--as i know some exist. Ideally, we would separate people that "just didn't" donate organs because they don't want to and those who have legitimate reasons. This is incredibly impractical, however.
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