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Unnatural Death: Medicine's Descent from Healing to Killing Paperback – Aug. 1 2024

4.8 out of 5 stars 12 ratings

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In this wide-ranging history of euthanasia and assisted suicide, historian Richard Weikart takes us from the ancient Jews, Greeks, and Romans to the contemporary scene—where the urge to help people kill themselves has intensified, even to the point of pushing the reluctant towards death. How did we reach this place? Unnatural Death answers this question by tracing a complex and fascinating history of ideas, attitudes, and legal wranglings stretching from Socrates to Peter Singer and beyond. Along the way Weikart shows diverse thinkers wrestling with the tension between the unalienable preciousness of human life and the longing to escape suffering and despair. As the author shows, the Judeo-Christian tradition encouraged a culture of life, but the secular Enlightenment and Darwinian materialism have tugged us in a different direction. In the book’s final pages, Weikart considers where these currents are pulling us, and what can be done to reverse course.

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Review

"In all his writings, Richard Weikart tackles the most controversial issues, and in this book he takes on euthanasia and assisted suicide. The only way to stand effectively against a harmful social trend is to first understand where it came from and how it developed. We must identify the cause to apply an appropriate cure. That's why Weikart's careful historical analysis is so needed in our day."

-Nancy Pearcey, Professor and Scholar in Residence, Houston Christian University, author of Total Truth and Love Thy Body


"Richard Weikart's superb new book, Unnatural Death: Medicine's Descent from Healing to Killing, is a vitally important reply to the organized disposal of unwanted people. As state-sanctioned killing of the sick and the handicapped and even the merely troubled becomes more and more acceptable in previously civilized nations such as Canada, the Netherlands, Switzerland, and the United States, Weikart shines a light on this methodical obsession with ending the lives of vulnerable people. Weikart wields the most potent weapon we have against the culture of death: he tells the truth about what is happening in dark corners."

-Michael Egnor, Professor of Neurosurgery, Renaissance School of Medicine, Stony Brook University


"In Unnatural Death Dr. Richard Weikart uses his formidable skills of historical analysis to show... how the rise of an idealized version of Greco-Roman cultural norms during the Renaissance and Enlightenment led to the progressive erosion of the Judeo-Christian ethic of "love your neighbor as yourself" and put us on a slippery slope to a culture of death. Happily, Dr. Weikart does not end on a hopeless note of inevitable decline into a culture of death, but instead offers a way off the slippery slope and onto a path to a culture of life. I strongly recommend you read this book."

-Howard Glicksman, hospice physician and co-author of Your Designed Body


"In Unnatural Death, Professor Richard Weikart offers a readable and comprehensive history of euthanasia and assisted suicide from the time of the ancient Greeks, through the centuries, to the contemporary world in which doctors are legally allowed to administer lethal injections in several countries and can prescribe drug overdoses to terminally ill patients in ten US states. Weikart effectively demonstrates that from its genesis in the pernicious eugenics movement, assisted suicide/euthanasia theory and practice are rooted in a deep and disturbing disdain for human equality, presenting a potent threat, not only to the terminally ill not offered suicide prevention if they ask to die, but also to people with disabilities, the elderly, and even the mentally ill as so-called right-to-die laws expand over time."

-Wesley J. Smith, host of the Humanize podcast (www.humanize.today)


"Unnatural Death is a first-rate piece of historical work on the history of euthanasia. The history is mostly a dark one as he traces it from the Greco-Roman period through today. The connection with the modern euthanasia movement and eugenics is particularly helpful. I especially commend his final sections rebutting the pro-euthanasia argument from autonomy and defending the concern that euthanasia is a slippery slope. This book is essential reading for anyone with an interest in this important area of bioethics."

-Scott B. Rae, Dean of Faculty and Professor of Christian Ethics, Talbot School of Theology, Biola University


"I highly recommend Richard Weikart's powerful, accessible, and important book on euthanasia and assisted suicide."

-Paul Copan, Pledger Family Chair of Philosophy and Ethics, Palm Beach Atlantic University (Florida)

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Discovery Institute
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ Aug. 1 2024
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 208 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 163712046X
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1637120460
  • Item weight ‏ : ‎ 313 g
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 15.24 x 1.32 x 22.86 cm
  • Best Sellers Rank: #445,160 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.8 out of 5 stars 12 ratings

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Richard Weikart
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Richard Weikart is professor of history at California State Univ., Stanislaus. He recently completed a documentary project, "Exploring the Reformation and Revivals in Germany," which is available on youtube. He has published six books, including most recently _The Death of Humanity: And the Case for Life_, and _Hitler's Religion: The Twisted Beliefs That Drove the Third Reich_. His previous books included _From Darwin to Hitler: Evolutionary Ethics, Eugenics, and Racism in Germany_ and _Hitler’s Ethic: The Nazi Pursuit of Evolutionary Progress_, both published by the scholarly publisher Palgrave Macmillan. In addition to his books, he has published many articles, review essays, and reviews in scholarly journals.

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  • Kindle Customer
    5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent overview of the history of euthanasia
    Reviewed in Australia on May 14, 2025
    Verified Purchase
    Sets out how we got to legalised euthanasia in several jurisdictions, how it is expansive whenever legalised to cover more categories of people and by the removing of initial "safeguards" and good arguments for reversing this fatally flawed experiment.
  • K. Moss
    5.0 out of 5 stars More books like this!
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on September 3, 2024
    Verified Purchase
    I think an upfront confession of bias might be in order: I have read all of Richard Weikart's published works, and found them to be well-researched, well-written and moderate in their conclusions. I came to this new publication ('Unnatural Death') with expectations of something similar and was not disappointed.

    Richard may be an academic, and he may have extensive experience in related research, but this is an accessible treatment - one where the author takes care to connect a range of quite clearly related topics. Thus, one cannot consider 'assisted suicide' in isolation, without reflecting on the nature of suicide, and how that plays out within our culture - or, for that matter, without considering 'assistance', and who is doing the assisting, and how that alters the entire pathology of medical care. It is therefore reasonable and relevant to consider historic contexts where, through the dominance of a prevailing worldview, unwilling patients were 'assisted' in the dying process by medical professionals. How did the surrounding culture respond to that? What did those medics then go on to do? How does ideology interact with clinical practice, and should this be a phenomenon that we should welcome in the name of 'autonomy'?

    I don't want to spoil the punch-lines in Richard's treatment of this current hot-topic, but I think he is absolutely correct to avoid the myopia of attempting to treat 'assisted suicide' (or it's new, politically-correct alternative) as a kind of standalone topic which has no connection with anything else that ought to worry us profoundly. He very effectively demonstrates that the justification of 'autonomy' as a driving rationale is actually internally inconsistent. He demonstrates that, whilst the 'slippery slope' argued by opponents of assisted suicide may not always legitimately frame the argument against the practice, it certainly exists in the real world, judging by the inexorable opening of Pandora's box, once the law is changed.

    This treatment is well-written, and careful - although the subject-matter (especially when the author covers real-world examples of abuse where we are told the safeguards are rigorous) is deeply unsettling. It is a necessary and useful contribution to the debate, and I think it raises even more questions which ought to be explored by those of us who are concerned about the implications of this 'culture of death'.