No offense but after some of your posts, I really don't think you have room to say that.
Please state were I have advocated putting 100% importance on the individual.
I see suicide as a personal choice, I have no problem with it.
Um. In practice, I don't think anyone holds such a belief, unless he or she truly puts 100% importance on the individual decisions.
Of course you would as it would bring up points that directly contradict your stance.
According to your rationale Mrs.Schiavo should have been kept alive indefinitely regardless of her own beliefs.
Either that or you would have to fall into some type of generalized sliding scale of value on human life.
I'm not biting this red herring, linwood. The Terry Schiavo case isn't even in the same league as the OP.
Furthermore, I don't understand why the burden seems to be directed toward me to defend my case. It's as if saying that murder is acceptable is the default position (as do suicide and dueling here), and the burden is on those who claim it to be wrong. That is simply unrealistic. The burden in this debate lies with those who claim that dueling, and all of its social ramifications, and all the lives that it would negatively impact, is okay. All the rest of us have to do is interject reasonable doubt, which is simply what I'm doing.
Now, I'm going at it in a roundabout way, claiming that neither the individual or society should receive 100% focus. But really, one could simply claim that by definition of consent, a rational and sane adult cannot consent to a duel, because to do so would effectively void that person's sanity. So see? Even if it's all about the individual, there's still a wall to cross that hasn't been crossed yet.