I live in the UK and a few years back I looked into whether my body could be converted into one of those cool articulated skeletons on my death.
It turns out there's currently a huge oversupply of articulated skeletons in the UK, as the "Human Tissue Act 2004" [1] means (tldr) you now have to have a license to own one. An amnesty means the few institutions that have such licenses have more skeletons than they can possibly use.
Apparently as many as 8 a week are dropped off, grinning from the back seat and enjoying their day out.
They're probably working with remains that have gone through the 'donation to science' route. That line should be taken in the context of the entire article being about keeping your own relatives skulls not just about skulls period.
A common "Today I learned"-frontpager on reddit is about composer Tchaikowsky's skull, which was donated to be used in Hamlet, described on Wikipedia here:
I'm a bit disappointed to hear that. There is a magnificent plotline on the TV show Slings and Arrows, attempting to get a friend's skull made into a prop for use as Yorick in Hamlet. That's based on real life: various skulls are passed down in the theater tradition as possibly belonging to famous actors[1]. (On the show, they ended up using a disreputable taxidermist.)
I had a vague notion that some day my own skull might become part of the properties of my own theater troupe. It's probably a very bad idea and it's more than half a joke, but it's a bit disappointing to hear that it's not really possible.
The legal principle is simple: it make a person legally dead and so the intentional act is murder. Unfortunately the law doesn't recognise the concept that cryogenic preservation may not in effect kill a person in the long run.
On the other hand, if it were not regarded as killing, you may find healthy people being preserved based on oversold promises of revival from cryonics practitioners.
Perhaps the best compromise for the time being is to regard it as euthanasia, and legalise that with some sensible safeguards. I wonder whether in any countries where euthanasia is legal, opting for direct cryopreservation would be permissible.
I wonder if these laws could be challenges under freedom of speech laws? Isn't determine what is done with your body via will a final act of speech that should be protected?
Your Last Will and Testament is (AFAICT - IANAL) not really final.
* It can be challenged on the grounds that its provisions are unlawful. Leaving all your money to your cat might be an example.
* It can apparently be challenged on the grounds that it is unfair; deceased parents leaving their children destitute by leaving all their money to a pet-care charity might be an example.
* Many wills are deliberately couched in terms that are vague or confusing; this may be in the service of avoiding inheritance taxes, but it opens the way for challenges.
* There may be evidence outside the will itself that the testator has deliberately contrived his legacy so as to avoid his debts.
As far as I can see, your will is really just an expression of your intentions. You can't enforce it (of course). If your executor egregiously violates the express intentions of deceased, they can be sued by relatives. But in general, executors seem to have considerable latitude; it is assumed that, having been appointed by the deceased, they are reasonably familiar with their intent.
Anyhow, I don't think your corpse is part of your estate; I don't think executors can dispose of it in the same way they might dispose of land, paintings and investments.
Incidentally, Freedom of Speech laws are quite rare. I don't know of any country other than the USA that has constitutional protections for speech. Certainly there is no legal protection for speech in the UK, other than the vague principle that "anything that is not forbidden by law is permitted by law".
> Incidentally, Freedom of Speech laws are quite rare. I don't know of any country other than the USA that has constitutional protections for speech.
I think freedom of speech is almost universally considered an inalienable human right. It tends to be protected by international treaty obligations (which usually have the force of law?). Wikipedia says:
>> Today, freedom of speech, or the freedom of expression, is recognised in international and regional human rights law. The right is enshrined in Article 19 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, Article 10 of the European Convention on Human Rights, Article 13 of the American Convention on Human Rights and Article 9 of the African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights.
Regarding the UK, the English Bill of Rights protects free speech and I believe it still has the force of law and is cited in legal cases.
Freedom of speech is not given the same primacy as it is in the US in other countries; while it is a right everywhere, for example the ICCPC you cited also has Article 20:
>Any advocacy of national, racial or religious hatred that constitutes incitement to discrimination, hostility or violence shall be prohibited by law.
Germany has even stronger caveats to freedom of speech. The US stands alone (to my knowledge) in the way it treats freedom of speech because of the wording and interpretation of the first amendment, which is why there is so much debate in the field of first amendment jurisprudence and philosophy as to what its limits are and what they, in the views of many researchers, what they should be. See Susan Brison's arguments on that point. Countries such as the UK and Germany frequently allow concerns of discrimination, the silencing power of speech, and other factors to override pure freedom of speech.
To my knowledge, the bill of rights only applies in England and Wales, and it is extremely infrequently used, and hasn't been, to my knowledge, used to protect freedom of speech (at least not any time recently).
That seems far-fetched, at best. Freedom of speech guarantees your right to say that you want this, but does not force anyone to actually comply with it. Especially if it requires breaking a law.
Who said anything about forcing people to comply? I am talking about the constitutionality of certain laws that that make it illegal to comply with an individual's last wishes (when those wishes would not impinge of the freedom of others)
The point is that an act that is explicitly authorized in a will should not qualify as abuse of a corpse, not that no laws should apply to the disposal of a corpse.
If your will stipulates that your body be used to commit a criminal act, the should be prevented by the normal application of the law. Laws should not impact an individual's right for self determination of the disposal of a their body without a clear set of harms that are being ameliorated (such as in other exceptions to the prohition of prior restraint)
I am a bit surprised with the pushback here. Death rituals are incredibly personal and tied up with cultural and religious mores. It seems that freedom of religion and freedom of speech should protect such a personal and significant choice.
> Death rituals are incredibly personal and tied up with cultural and religious mores. It seems that freedom of religion and freedom of speech should protect such a personal and significant choice.
There's a lot of leeway in enforcement of all laws and if you could present evidence that the treatment the corpse received was consistent with a religious practice you'd probably be fine, though there would be levels where the conduct is limitable (eg: public display of the corpse as it decomposes for example).
For all the language of "shall make no law" or "shall not infringe" there are many laws that make limitations on freedom of speech, religion, and bear arms. It's hard to imagine any law standing up to a maximal interpretation of freedom of religion for example because a religion can be anything and hold any precepts.
Remains treatment laws were actually addressing a need and harm at the time where corpses were being dug up for medical study against the wishes of the deceased and the restrictions work because they're largely in line with the majority of religions especially in the US. It hasn't really been challenged because very few people actually want to do something against the law with their relatives corpses.
Not a chance, anything around integrity of final will and testament would be a much better fit than free speech. IANAL though, no idea where it would sit on the scale from laughed-out-of-the-room to stands-a-chance.
It turns out there's currently a huge oversupply of articulated skeletons in the UK, as the "Human Tissue Act 2004" [1] means (tldr) you now have to have a license to own one. An amnesty means the few institutions that have such licenses have more skeletons than they can possibly use.
Apparently as many as 8 a week are dropped off, grinning from the back seat and enjoying their day out.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_Tissue_Act_2004