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Is excessive plastic surgery ethical?
Topic Started: Jun 23 2018, 08:26 PM (594 Views)
+ Ginyu
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Leve Feyenoord 1!

If their health is not in jeopardy and they're paying for it themselves I don't see it being unethical. You're responsible for your own body.
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Ask GinyuTokusentai
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+ Green
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Flashy Thing!

Dankness Lava
Jun 24 2018, 04:07 AM
That's great and all, but thr person in question could use the money for something more practical.
I think that's a little too judgy. That's like saying that someone shouldn't buy a bag of chips because the money could be better spent on something healthier. Sure, that might be true but people still have the right to screw up their own lives. There are so many different views on the world and life that could lead to the justification of almost anything.
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+ Pelador
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How about if they have an obvious addiction to surgery? It is right for doctors to keep feeding that addiction?


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+ Steve
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Pelador
Jun 24 2018, 12:32 PM
How about if they have an obvious addiction to surgery? It is right for doctors to keep feeding that addiction?
This is largely what I was getting at initially.


Like I said the "Do whatever you want" attitude is really not fair when some people certainly need mental help, not to just be enabled like this. If everyone was of sound mind then sure go ahead and make dumbass mistakes but that's just not the case.

Nobody who wants to look like this and thinks it's normal can be right in the head: https://www.unilad.co.uk/health/human-ken-doll-reveals-what-he-looked-like-before-all-the-surgery/

I feel like you should be ashamed to call yourself a doctor if you help someone get like that, someone who quite clearly has problems.
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Dingo
Jun 24 2018, 05:29 AM
Like what?
Seeing the cost of plastic surgery, you could easily buy a car.
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Dingo
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Dankness Lava
Jun 24 2018, 03:54 PM
Dingo
Jun 24 2018, 05:29 AM
Like what?
Seeing the cost of plastic surgery, you could easily buy a car.
The majority of people having plastic surgery are often doing just fine financially.


Steve
 


Like I said the "Do whatever you want" attitude is really not fair when some people certainly need mental help, not to just be enabled like this. If everyone was of sound mind then sure go ahead and make dumbass mistakes but that's just not the case.

Nobody who wants to look like this and thinks it's normal can be right in the head: https://www.unilad.co.uk/health/human-ken-doll-reveals-what-he-looked-like-before-all-the-surgery/

I feel like you should be ashamed to call yourself a doctor if you help someone get like that, someone who quite clearly has problems.


That person is a eccentric business owner and seems to be pretty well socially adjusted. I don't see the problem with what he's done.

I don't get how you're making judgements on the mental state of people you don't even know.
Edited by Dingo, Jun 24 2018, 04:08 PM.
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They can do whatever they want with their money. I just don't agree with it.
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Topographic Oceans
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How is this a thing you can even agree or disagree with? If they decided to buy a car instead, would it make any sense for me to say I "disagree" with the purchase of automotive vehicles?
Edited by Topographic Oceans, Jun 24 2018, 04:38 PM.
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Topographic Oceans
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As for the topic, if a doctor is willfully enabling unhealthy behavior then yeah, it's obviously unethical. I don't think many would question that. It's just a question of what constitutes "unhealthy behavior" in cases like these.
Edited by Topographic Oceans, Jun 24 2018, 04:45 PM.
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That's not what I meant.
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Topographic Oceans
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What did you mean?
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I'm honestly not even sure where I was going with this.
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+ Saiyan Paladin
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It's not unethical, but if you feel the need to get copious amounts of plastic surgery to make yourself feel like you fit into some societal views you may have some issues with self acceptance.
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smoochymucci
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Steve
Jun 23 2018, 08:26 PM
Specifically when people are pretty much "addicted" to it or very clearly suffer severe self esteem issues and feel the need to "fix" themselves with it.

"it's their money" and all but from a medical standpoint I feel like it's not at all ethical to allow people to do that, it's just enabling quite destructive behaviour and further than that it also encourages other insecure people to feel the same, thinking they need surgery because they're ugly.

I'm really not sure why it's still allowed, obviously realistically speaking, money but has it never been called in to question how damaging all this is?


Personally I think it's all stupid unless someone has been deformed by illness or injury. All these celebrities with a** implants and puffy lips look utterly ridiculous, not a single one of them looks better and certainly not when they get older.
More and more people have depression and self esteem issues these days.
I do wonder how much stuff like this adds to that since it destroys "Be happy with what you've got" messages.
You can't walk through a magazine column without seeing something about this celeb's new nose or new boobs.
If people want to do it and have the money for it, what's it to you? People do self-destructive s*** all the time. You'd have a long list of stuff to ban if you want to go down that road.
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