Abstract
Two experiments investigated whether moral evaluations of organ transplantation influence judgments of death and causation. Participants’ beliefs about whether an unconscious organ donor was dead and whether organ removal caused death in a hypothetical vignette varied depending on the moral valence of the vignette. Those who were randomly assigned to the good condition (vs. bad) were more likely to believe that the donor was dead prior to organ removal and that organ removal did not cause death. Furthermore, attitudes toward euthanasia and organ donation independently predicted judgments of death and causation, regardless of experimental condition. The results are discussed in light of the framework of motivated reasoning, in which motivation influences the selection of cognitive processes and representations applied to a given domain, as well as Knobe’s person-as-moralist model, in which many basic concepts are appropriately imbued with moral features. On either explanatory framework, these data cast doubt on the psychological legitimacy of the mainstream justification for vital organ procurement from heart-beating donors, which holds that neurological criteria for death are scientifically justified, independently of concerns about organ transplantation. These data suggest that, rather than concluding that organ removal is permissible because the donor is dead, people may believe that the donor is dead because they believe organ removal to be permissible.
Highlights
The practice of organ transplantation is premised on an ethical constraint known as the dead donor rule, which states that the removal of vital organs must not cause the death of the donor
A higher percentage of participants in the good condition (41 %) reported knowing someone who had donated an organ after death relative to participants in the bad condition (27 %), χ2 (1, N=219)=5.01, p=
We found that people’s beliefs about whether an unconscious organ donor was dead and whether organ removal caused death in a hypothetical vignette varied depending on the moral valence of the vignette
Summary
The practice of organ transplantation is premised on an ethical constraint known as the dead donor rule, which states that the removal of vital organs must not cause the death of the donor This deontic constraint forbids the causing of one patient’s death in order to benefit others, even if the patient is unconscious, debilitated, or very near death [1]. The prevailing view holds that from a biomedical perspective, neurological and circulatory criteria for the determination of death are two different ways of identifying the same underlying state of human death [2] According to this view, neurological criteria for death are based on sound biomedical science and philosophical reasoning, and are justified independently of other concerns, including organ transplantation [3]
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