Pantheism: God exists in nature, everything is God and God is everything.
Deism: The universe follows God's Laws of order, also believed that God created the universe and its physical laws, set the universe into motion and then moved away, and also believed that god has no personal relationship with his humans.
Theism: God and humans have a personal relationship and direct communication through prayers, meditations, etc.. Theism can be polytheistic (belief in one God) of monotheistic (belief in more than one God)
Atheism: God doesn’t exist because there are no enough proofs
Agnosticism: God's existence isn’t certain because there are no good evidence for both sides.
ARTICLE
On June 5, the province of Quebec adopted the controversial Bill 52, also known as the “end-of-life-care bill,” which would legally permit doctors to actively participate in the death of terminally ill patients suffering from physical or psychological pain. Euthanasia, on the other hand, requires a physician to be present, perform the procedure, and ensure everything runs smoothly, thus incorporating them into the process. Quebec would allow doctors to do the deed, but according to Quebec lawmakers it’s not euthanasia, per se.
Originally, the word 'euthanasia' was derived from two Greek roots meaning 'good death'. It is the deliberate killing of a person for the benefit of that person.
The applied ethical issue of euthanasia, or mercy killing, concerns whether it is morally permissible for a third party, such as a physician, to end the life of a terminally ill patient who is in intense pain
Deontological approaches to decision making look at the action and decide whether it is right or wrong. Teleological approaches, however, look at the consequences of an action to see if it is at least as good as any available alternative.
Deontological ethics take account of the motives and intentions of the individual engaging in the act, whereas teleological theories are