Human Beings are Never Vegetables. Ever.

ChelseaDisabled1 Comment

terriBy and large, we no longer refer to the profoundly disabled by the nasty term “human weeds” anymore, but that doesn’t mean we’ve stopped treating them as less than human. In fact, we’ve just come up with another, equally degrading and dehumanizing term to refer to them as. We call them “vegetables” and we use this term to justify denying them their basic human right to nutrition and hydration. But where did the term “vegetative state” come from?

Over at Catholic Lane, Dr. Dianne Irving explains:

The term “vegetative state” became popular at the “birth” of bioethics (1978 Belmont Report). It is traced to the “delayed personhood” arguments used at the beginning of life issues: first the vegetative soul is present, then later the sensitive soul is added, and finally (about 3-4 months) the rational soul is added. Then and only then is there a human being with a rational soul to be respected. St. Thomas (following Aristotle), as well as many religions today still follow that odd and scientifically/philosophically false dictum.

What bioethics did was also reverse this dictum to end of life issues — and this was taught in a major seminar at a Georgetown bioethics conference early on (about 1990). Those of us in the seminar on “euthanasia” were taught that — just as there is a series of souls at the beginning of life — at the end of life the reverse happens (supposedly adapted from St. Thomas): in the dying patient, first the rational soul leaves the body, then the sensitive soul leaves the body, and finally the only thing left there in the patient is the vegetative soul — and thus there is no “person” really present! Of course, that would also mean that with euthanasia, physician assisted suicide (PAS), and organ transplantation, the use of such “vegetables” in human research, etc., would be “ethical”. This concept of the “vegetative state” was immediately picked up by one of the first new bioethics international centers in France — INSERM. They were the ones who really popularized the phrase.

Of course, St. Thomas (and Aristotle) were systematically required as classical realist philosophers to start their philosophizing with empirical facts, and those that they “started” with in their “delayed hominization” arguments were empirically false; they both still believed that there were only 4 material elements in the natural world: air, earth, fire and water! Needless to say, whatever philosophical personhood concepts they arrived at from that false empirical starting place would be erroneous. But if you look at both St. Thomas’ and Aristotle’s systematic dogmas on the “soul”, both taught that there was only one soul with three powers — the rational soul — that includes virtually both the sensitive and the vegetative powers.

Read more.

Instead of being considered offensive and as unacceptable as calling black people the “N” word, today people are declared to be “vegetative” with all the authority and legitimacy of a medical diagnosis, but this is neither biologically or philosophically correct. Human beings do not become a different type of organism when their cognitive abilities are impaired. No disease or disability can take away our humanity and no amount of suffering can take away our dignity as human beings.

One Comment on “Human Beings are Never Vegetables. Ever.”

  1. That’s so true Chelsea! 🙂
    Christofer Reeves realized his injury was paralyzing.In that devastating moment his wife told him “You’re still you.And I love you.”…and he says that her saying that reassured him that it was not sympathy or a sense of obligation that made her stay with him but true love.He didn’t feel like he was a burden to her,because of the kind words and matching actions of his faithful and loving wife:)
    I love that … no matter what the physical deformity or mental disease,the person we once knew,is still within and we will always love them and cling to them.Lord,heal us of our vanity that makes us overvalue physical beauty and vigor and forget spiritual riches hidden in our fallen brothers.

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