In Quadrant, Dalrymple examines the logic of assisted suicide legislation, arguing that once the avoidance of suffering is accepted as the criterion, there is no principled reason to confine assisted suicide to the terminally ill and that measuring suffering objectively is not possible.
The fundamental problem with any law that tries to make suffering the criterion of eligibility for assistance with suicide is that it has in effect to measure suffering in the same way as the level of haemoglobin in the blood is measured, as if it were purely objective: that is to say, as if such and such a condition resulted in such and such an amount of suffering, and as if there were a cutoff point at which it became intolerable. All this is necessarily false.
