Deciding to Forego Life-Sustaining Treatment. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1983: 71.
2.
RachelsJ., “Active and Passive Euthanasia,”The New England Journal of Medicine1975; 292: 79.
3.
FeldmanD.M.RosnerF., eds., Jewish Compendium on Medical Ethics.New York: Federation of Jewish Philanthropies, 1984: 12.
4.
Declaration on Euthanasia, Origins1980; 10: 155. Also in: Deciding to Forego Life-Sustaining Treatment, Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1983: 302.
5.
NevinsM., “Perspectives of a Jewish Physician,” in LynnJ., ed., By No Extraordinary Means, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1986: 100.
6.
McCormickR., “To Save or Let Die: The Dilemma of Modern Medicine,” in How Brave a New World?Washington, D.C.: Georgetown University Press, 1985: 349. Also in: Journal of the American Medical Association1974; 229: 172–176.
7.
FuchsJ., “Christian Faith and the Disposing of Human Life,”Theological Studies1985; 46: 673.
8.
EdelsteinL., “The Hippocratic Oath,” in TemkinO.TemkinL., eds., Ancient Medicine: Selected Papers of Ludwig Edelstein, Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, 1967: 55ff.
9.
AmundsenD.W., “The Physician's Obligation to Prolong Life: A Medical Duty without Classical Roots,”The Hastings Center Report, August 1978; 8: 26f.
10.
Politics, 1335b20-26.
11.
Nicomachean ethics, 1116a10-15; 1138a3-15.
12.
BeauchampT.L.ChildressJ.F., Principles of Biomedical Ethics, New York: Oxford University Press, 1983: 5.
13.
See: D'ArcyE., Human Action, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1963: 192ff.
14.
Nicomachean ethics, 1106b35-1107a3.
15.
Id.: 1104b25-27.
16.
Id.: 1111a3-6.
17.
Summa theologiae, I–II. q.7, a.1, a.2, a.4.
18.
Id.: Q. 64, a.1.
19.
Nicomachean ethics, 1106b36-1107a1.
20.
KuhseH., “The Case for Active Voluntary Euthanasia,”Law, Medicine & Health Care1986; 14: 146f.
21.
AlexanderL., “Medical Science under Dictatorship,”The New England Journal of Medicine1949; 249: 39–47.
22.
JonsenA.R., “Casuistry and Clinical Ethics,”Theoretical Medicine1986; 7: 65–74.