See H. Kuhse, A Modern Myth: That Letting Die Is not the Intentional Causation of Death: Some Reflections on the Trial and Acquittal of Dr. Leonard Arthur, Journal of Applied Philosophy 1(1): 21 (1984).
2.
Report of a Working Party, Euthanasia and Clinical Practice (London: Linacre Centre, 1982), p. 57 (my italics).
3.
Social Development Committee, First Report, Inquiry into Options for Dying with Dignity (Parliament of Victoria, March 1986) [hereafter cited as First Report].
4.
See H. Kuhse, submission to the Inquiry into Options for Dying with Dignity, May 1986.
5.
First Report, supra note 3, at 11.
6.
KuhseH., Sanctity-of-Life in Medicine, (Oxford: Oxford University Press, forthcoming), chaps. 3–4.
7.
President's Commission for the Study of Ethical Problems in Medicine and Biomedical and Behavioral Research, Deciding to Forego Life-Sustaining Treatment (Washington, D.C.: GPO, 1983), at 77–89.
8.
See, e.g., Allan Kellehear, Are We a “Death-Denying” Society? A Sociological Review, Social Science and Medicine 18(9): 713 (1984).
9.
From E.Ph.R. Sutorius, How Euthanasia Was Legalized in Holland (unpublished paper).
10.
Id.
11.
BattinPabst M., The Least Worst Death, Hastings Center Report13(2): 13 (April 1983).
12.
World Medical Assembly, Statement on Terminal Illness and Boxing: 35th Medical Assembly, Venice, Italy, 1983, Medical Journal of Australia 140: 431 (1984).