Won’t it? If you’re dying of cancer and find out that I threw away the cure, that’s the difference between survival and death, and it will likely feel even worse for knowing that a cure was possible.
The dying-of-cancer-level harm is independent of whether I find out that you didn’t offer me the opportunity. The sadness at knowing that I could have not been dying-of-cancer is not equivalent to the harm of dying-of-cancer.
It is equivalent to it. (1) dying of cancer --> big negative. (2) cure available --> negative cancelled. (3) denied access to cure --> big negative restored, and increased. That denial of access to a cure actively becomes the cause of death. It is no longer simply death by cancer, but death by denial of access to available cure for cancer.
Won’t it? If you’re dying of cancer and find out that I threw away the cure, that’s the difference between survival and death, and it will likely feel even worse for knowing that a cure was possible.
The dying-of-cancer-level harm is independent of whether I find out that you didn’t offer me the opportunity. The sadness at knowing that I could have not been dying-of-cancer is not equivalent to the harm of dying-of-cancer.
It is equivalent to it. (1) dying of cancer --> big negative. (2) cure available --> negative cancelled. (3) denied access to cure --> big negative restored, and increased. That denial of access to a cure actively becomes the cause of death. It is no longer simply death by cancer, but death by denial of access to available cure for cancer.