166
Some Ethical and Theological Considerations
References
1) Immortality Institute 2003: Constitution & Bylaws,
http:// imminst.org/about/constitution.php
2) Delkeskamp-Hayes, Corrina; The Price of Being
Conciliatory: Remarks about Mellons Model for Hospital
Chaplaincy Work in Multi-Faith Settings in: Christian
Bioethics (2003, vol.9, no.1); pg. 71
3) Pope John Paul II; The Gospel of Life in: Last Rights?
Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia Debated (1998), Eerdmans;
pg.223
4) Pope John Paul II describes this as a new cultural climate
characterized by attacks against life by a corrupt view of
individual rights and the enactment of laws that deviate from
basic constitutional law supported by the assistance of health
care systems. ((See Endnote 4, pg.226.))
5) Singer, Peter, 1998, Rethinking Life and Death: A New
Ethical Approach ((See Endnote 4, pg.171))
6) Kevorkian, Jack, 1998, A Fail-Safe Model for Justifiable
Medically Assisted Suicide, ((See Endnote 4, pg.263))
7) Editorial; Death by Default in Christianity Today
(5 February 2001), pg. 26
8) Drane, James F.; More Humane Medicine: A Liberal
Catholic Bioethics (2003) Attenborough
9) Clowney, Edmund; Jesus Christ and the Lostness of
Man in: Jesus Christ: Lord of the Universe, Hope of the World
(1974), InterVarsity Press; pg. 53