Kennedy Institute of Ethics, Georgetown University, Healy 419, 3700 O Street NW, Washington, DC, 20057, USA.
Theor Med Bioeth. 2019 Oct;40(5):455-481. doi: 10.1007/s11017-019-09504-w.
For decades, physicians, philosophers, theologians, lawyers, and the public considered brain death a settled issue. However, a series of recent cases in which individuals were declared brain dead yet physiologically maintained for prolonged periods of time has challenged the status quo. This signals a need for deeper reflection and reexamination of the underlying philosophical, scientific, and clinical issues at stake in defining death. In this paper, I consider four levels of philosophical inquiry regarding death: the ontological basis, actual states of affairs, epistemological standards, and clinical criteria for brain death. I outline several candidates for the states of affairs that may constitute death, arguing that we should strive for a single, unified ontological definition of death as a loss of integrated functioning as a unified organism, while acknowledging that two states of affairs (cardiopulmonary death and whole-brain death) may satisfy this concept. I argue that the clinical criteria for determining whole-brain death should be bolstered to meet the epistemic demand of sufficient certainty in defining death by adding indicators of cerebro-somatic dis-integration to the traditional triad of loss of consciousness, loss of brainstem function, and absence of confounding explanations.
几十年来,医生、哲学家、神学家、律师和公众都认为脑死亡是一个既定的问题。然而,最近出现了一系列案例,其中一些人被宣布脑死亡,但在很长一段时间内仍保持生理上的存活,这对现状提出了挑战。这表明需要更深入地反思和重新审视定义死亡所涉及的潜在哲学、科学和临床问题。在本文中,我考虑了关于死亡的四个层次的哲学探究:本体论基础、实际存在的状态、认识论标准和脑死亡的临床标准。我概述了可能构成死亡的几种存在状态的候选者,认为我们应该努力为死亡制定一个单一的、统一的本体论定义,即作为一个统一的生物体的整体功能丧失,同时承认可能有两种存在状态(心肺死亡和全脑死亡)满足这个概念。我认为,确定全脑死亡的临床标准应该得到加强,以通过增加对脑体解体的指标来满足确定死亡的充分确定性的认识论要求,从而补充传统的意识丧失、脑干功能丧失和无混杂解释的三联征。