Ulysses pact

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A Ulysses pact or Ulysses contract is a freely made decision that is designed and intended to bind oneself in the future. The term is used in medicine, especially in reference to advance directives (also known as living wills), where there is some controversy over whether a decision made by a person in one state of health should be considered binding upon that person when he or she is in a markedly different, usually worse, state of health.

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[edit] Origin of the name

The term refers to the pact that Ulysses (Greek name Odysseus) made with his men as they approached the Sirens. Ulysses wanted to hear the Sirens' song although he knew that doing so would render him incapable of rational thought. He put wax in his men's ears so that they could not hear, and had them tie him to the mast so that he could not jump into the sea. He ordered them not to change course under any circumstances, and to keep their swords upon him to attack him if he should break free of his bonds.

Upon hearing the Sirens' song, Ulysses was driven temporarily insane and struggled with all of his might to break free so that he might join the Sirens, which would have meant his death.

[edit] Psychiatric context

Psychiatric advance directives are sometimes referred to as Ulysses pacts or Ulysses contracts, where there is a legal agreement designed to override a present request from a legally competent patient in favor of a past request made by that patient.[1] An example of when Ulysses contracts are invoked is when people with Schizophrenia patients stop taking their medication at perceived remission times.[2]

[edit] See also

[edit] Bibliography

Radden, Jennifer (1994). "Second thoughts: Revoking decisions over one's own future". Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 54 (4): 787–801. doi:10.2307/2108410. 

Feinberg, Joel (1986). Harm to self: The moral limits of the criminal law. New York: Oxford University Press. 

Schelling, Thomas C. (1970). The anatomy of values: Problems of personal and social choice. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. 

Schelling, Thomas C. (1984). Choice and consequence. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. 

[edit] References

  1. ^ Ryan Spellecy (2003). "Reviving Ulysses contracts". Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 13 (4): 373-392. 
  2. ^ Namita Puran (2005). "Ulysses Contracts: Bound to Treatment or Free to Choose?". The York Scholar 2: 42-51. 
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