I haven’t heard of people having strong ethical objections to vaccines. They have strong practical (if ill-founded) objections—they believe vaccines have dangers so extreme as to make the benefits not worth it, or they have strong heuristic objections—I think they believe health is an innate property of an undisturbed body or they believe that anyone who makes money from selling a drug can’t be trusted to tell the truth about its risks.
To my mind, an ethical objection would be a belief that people should tolerate the effects of infectious diseases for some reason such as that suffering is good in itself or that it’s better for selection to enable people to develop innate immunities.
To my mind, an ethical objection would be a belief that people should tolerate the effects of infectious diseases for some reason such as that suffering is good in itself
That wasn’t precisely the objection of Christian conservatives to the HPV vaccine (perhaps more nearly that they wanted sex to lead to suffering?), but it is fairly close
I haven’t heard of people having strong ethical objections to vaccines. They have strong practical (if ill-founded) objections—they believe vaccines have dangers so extreme as to make the benefits not worth it, or they have strong heuristic objections—I think they believe health is an innate property of an undisturbed body or they believe that anyone who makes money from selling a drug can’t be trusted to tell the truth about its risks.
To my mind, an ethical objection would be a belief that people should tolerate the effects of infectious diseases for some reason such as that suffering is good in itself or that it’s better for selection to enable people to develop innate immunities.
That wasn’t precisely the objection of Christian conservatives to the HPV vaccine (perhaps more nearly that they wanted sex to lead to suffering?), but it is fairly close
I am counting religious objections as ethical objections, and there are several groups out there that refuse all medical treatment.