Abstract
It is commonly accepted that voluntary active euthanasia
and physician-assisted suicide can be allowed, if at all,
only in the cases of patients whose conditions are
incurable. Yet, there are different understandings of
when a patient’s condition is incurable. In this article,
I consider two understandings of the notion of an
incurable condition that can be found in the recent
debate on physician-assisted dying. According to one of
them, a condition is incurable when it is known that
there is no cure for it. According to the other, a
condition is incurable when no cure is known to exist for
it. I propose two criteria for assessing the conceptions
and maintain that, in light of the criteria, the latter is
more plausible than the former.