I’m not making that argument, but I do think that it’s easy to produce examples. For example, that was the problem with the Tuskegee experiment. The original incarnation was harmless, merely failing to provide expensive treatment that wouldn’t have been provided by default, only a problem in Schrödinger’s ethics. But later the investigators interfered with several other groups (eg, the WWII military) who wanted to provide treatment.
Maybe, but if this is common enough to justify limiting experimentation I’d expect people to be able to easily find examples.
I’m not making that argument, but I do think that it’s easy to produce examples. For example, that was the problem with the Tuskegee experiment. The original incarnation was harmless, merely failing to provide expensive treatment that wouldn’t have been provided by default, only a problem in Schrödinger’s ethics. But later the investigators interfered with several other groups (eg, the WWII military) who wanted to provide treatment.