Jewish law about suicide

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Jewish jurisprudence differentiates between biblical commandments, which are those deemed to have been directly transmitted by the Creator to Moses, and non-biblical rules.8 Interestingly, Jewish law does not recognize the literal meaning of a verse in the bible, the Torah, as an authoritative statement of law. Indeed, some verses, taken literally, are incomprehensible.9 Instead, Jewish law maintains that an oral tradition transmitted to Moses both amplified and interpreted the written Torah.10 This oral tradition not only contained specific laws and information but also hermeneutical rules to be used to elucidate the Torah.11 According to Jewish tradition, there were a variety of purposes, unrelated to our present subject, for the creation of complementary written and oral traditions.12

Religious persecution of Jews, including orders banning the teaching of Jewish law, threatened preservation of the oral law. In response, a concession was made by ancient rabbinic leaders such that a succinct, incomplete form of the oral tradition, the Mishnah, was put into writing around the year 188 of the common era.13 The discussions and debates of early scholars in academies in Babylon and Jerusalem were separately recorded, forming, respectively, the Babylonian and Jerusalem Talmuds. The Babylonian Talmud was completed later than the Jerusalem Talmud,14 and, because the Babylonian discussions benefitted from knowledge of the Jerusalem Talmud, the Babylonian Talmud is the more influential.15

The writing of the Talmuds, however, was also seen as an allowance warranted only by the exigencies of the times. Consequently, the language of both Talmuds is terse and ambiguous.

Talmudic discussions typically focus on specific cases, which frequently involve relatively unusual - and, therefore, memorable - facts. The mission of a Jewish law scholar is to discern conceptual principles from these paradigms and to use them to reach legal conclusions regarding modern scenarios with quite different facts. Jewish law scholars must not only inspect the thought processes implicit in the questions, answers and statements of each participant in a given Talmudic discussion, but must test hypotheses in light of apparently inconsistent debates elsewhere in the Talmud. In addition, Jewish law recognizes a multi-tiered hierarchy of post-Talmudic commentators whose concerns and opinions must be considered as well. Talmudic sources, as construed by later rabbinic leaders, are regarded as the most authoritative statement of Jewish law.16 Because of various practical constraints, however, this Article cannot identify all of the Talmudic sources relevant to physician-assisted suicide and trace how they have been construed and applied by Jewish law experts. Nor will this Article attempt to introduce novel interpretations of Jewish law or to decisively resolve contemporary debate among Jewish law scholars. Instead, our limited purpose is to explain how Jewish law, as understood by most contemporary authorities, applies to physician-assisted suicide.17

PART II: APPLICATION OF SPECIFIC JEWISH LAW PRINCIPLES TO PHYSICIAN-ASSISTED SUICIDE

Part II-A will articulate the fundamental Jewish law principles pertinent to physician-assisted suicide. Part II-B will study how these principles apply, in light of various possible extenuating circumstances, to the case of a competent patient who, because of intractable pain, wants to end her life.

A. Relevant Jewish Law Principles

As to physician-assisted suicide, the most important Jewish law concerns include:

1.<Tab/>The rules against murder and suicide - and the duty to rescue and to preserve life;

2.<Tab/>A person's lack of a proprietary interest in his life;

3.<Tab/>The general permissibility of medical intervention;

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4.<Tab/>The special status of a goses; and

5.<Tab/>The prohibition against giving someone improper advice and enabling someone to violate Jewish law.

1.Murder and Suicide - and the Duty to Rescue and to Preserve Life

One source of the prohibition against murder is found in the verse, "If one spills the blood of a man, one's [own] blood will be spilled."18 Each phrase of the immediately preceding passage, "The blood of your lives will I require; from the hand of every beast will I require it, and from the hand of man, from the hand of a person's brother, will I ...

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