A decision they would never get to make anyway, as only their legal guardian is empowered to act on their behalf.The_root_of_all_evil said:...
It's far easier, safer and less traumatic for someone unable to speak to opt in through selfishness than opt-out through terror.
How could a individual which have chosen that its organs should be used to save people, and whose choice gets shafted be considered any less "singular" than an individual who have chosen that its corpse is to retain its organs, and whose choice gets shafted?Problem with that. My sufferer is singular, your saviour could be anyone.
She might not be saved through just one transplant (although some are), but she may well die from lack of one.Also, are you saying that a virgin mother of eight
1) Is more important
2) Can be saved pain from the transplant
3) Can be saved from death purely through one transplant
4) Isn't incredibly likely to die on the operating table anyway? There's no way she could take an anesthetic in that condition.
And what condition?
I doubt there is need to question that many people have been saved though transplant of organs they had dire need for.You're bordering on Ad Hominem/Ad Absurdum there. Be careful.
Whereas you have decided that as a point of departure, the opposite is to be the case with the choice of an opt-in solution.Again, you've just decided for everyone that a living person always takes priority over a corpse. Not cool.
So yes, we want differing social contracts (or rather social contracts which both center around the individual choice, but with different results if that choice is passivity), and must argue for them. Very cool.
The mere knowledge of the opt-in solution also forces a choice, and clearly specifies the consequences of not being able to make it. Only difference is what those who choose passivity will end up with, and at the end they might just as well regret not being donors as they would being so.And the choice of the deceased would be in opting in. Opting out forces a choice. A choice some of us cannot make.
None at all.And you can still do that. As long as you opt out. And there's no guilt involved in opting out, is there?
Hence the need for a bureaucracy, and the inability to hold its inherent imperfection against it.Ad Absurdum. Anarchy couldn't even allow donation.
Depends on the family.What's worse for your family?
1) Seeing your organs removed against your will.
2) Seeing your organs kept with the body against your will.
No more so than the opt-in solution can already do, and it's ultimately still the choice of embracing organ donation - or the choice of remaining passive in the face of it - made by their loved one itself which would deny them a whole corpse to mourn.Your entire argument of "Living Bodies have more rights than Corpses" ignores the rights of all those who view the Corpse as the resting point of someone they loved.
Or giving them the opportunity to make a decision in the first place.There are numerous other ways that "opting out" would be the more efficient way to run the world, but you're not only painting the Organ Collectors as Angels, and the Organ Keepers as Devils - but you're also requiring the people most needing of Organs to make the final decision.
If they haven't died, then they aren't donor material.Here's a scenario: Your virgin mother of eight is about to die.
On the ward you have three people who have been in a coma since mandatory registration. They've never opted out. Each of them has a heart that could save this woman.
All it takes is you to pull that plug and you could save her.
I doubt any doctor would make himself a murderer even to save another patient. And if he would, it has no relation to the opt-in/opt-out discussion, as he'd then go ahead anyway.