Our goal in this article is to explicate the way, and the extent to which, euthanasia can be voluntary from both the perspective of the patient and the perspective of the health care providers involved in the patient's care. More significantly, we aim to challenge the way in which those engaged in ongoing philosophical debates regarding the morality of euthanasia draw distinctions between voluntary, involuntary, and nonvoluntary euthanasia on the grounds that drawing the distinctions in the traditional manner (1) fails to reflect what is important from the patient's perspective and (2) fails to reflect the significance of health care providers' interests, including their autonomy and integrity.
The paper focuses on Gottlob Frege's so called Context Principle (CP hereafter), which counts as one of the most controversial points of his philosophy. Due to its importance and centrality in Frege's thought, a detailed discussion of the principle requires a detailed analysis of almost all aspects of his philosophy. Obviously, such a task cannot be successfully accomplished here. Thus I limit myself to address only two questions concerning the CP: what role does the principle play (in Grundlagen) and how can we interpret it. Addressing the first problem is required in order to address the second. Most authors interpreted CP from the perspective of Frege's later distinction between sense and reference, which I will call the 'semantic interpretation'. Although I accept this perspective as valuable and important, I will initially inverse the action and I will try to approach CP, and generally Grundlagen, in a more natural way, contextually, namely setting them in the initial logicist plan of the Begriffschrift. Finally, I will try to provide an interpretation concerning the alleged conflict between CP and Frege's compositionality thesis such that they could coherently stay together.
Frege writes in Numbers and Arithmetic about kindergarten-numbers and "an a priori mode of cognition" that they may have "a geometrical source." This resembles recent findings on arithmetical cognition. In my paper, I explore this resemblance between Gottlob Frege's later position concerning the geometrical source of arithmetical knowledge, and some current positions in the literature dedicated to arithmetical cognition, especially that of Stanislas Dehaene. In my analysis, I shall try to mainly see to what extent (Frege's) logicism is compatible with (Dehaene's) intuitionism.Keywords: logicism, intuitionism, Frege, Dehaene, arithmetical cognition.
RESUMEN: En Numbers and ArithmeticFrege escribe que kindergarten-numbers y «un modo a priori de cognición» pueden tener «un origen geométrico». Esto se asemeja a algunos descubrimientos recientes sobre cognición aritmética. En mi artículo, exploro la semejanza entre la útlima posición de Gottlob Frege acerca del origen geométrico del conocimiento aritmético, y algunas posiciones actuales en la bibliografía sobre cognición aritmé-tica, especialmente la de Stanislas Dehaene. En mi análisis, intento principalmente determinar hasta qué punto el logicismo (de Frege) es compatible con el intuicionismo (de Dehaene).
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