I. J. Good’s original, which I’ve somewhat abridged, explicitly specifies that there are no competitors who cause visible losses/gains after the invention is rejected.
I. J. Good’s original, which I’ve somewhat abridged, explicitly specifies that there are no competitors who cause visible losses/gains after the invention is rejected.
To clarify, this is a summary of what you’ve excluded in your quote, not a response to the other case where the ethical problem exists, correct?
Fixed.
I. J. Good’s original, which I’ve somewhat abridged, explicitly specifies that there are no competitors who cause visible losses/gains after the invention is rejected.
To clarify, this is a summary of what you’ve excluded in your quote, not a response to the other case where the ethical problem exists, correct?
It’s a summary of what I excluded—I had actually misinterpreted, hence my quote indeed was not a valid reply! The other case is indeed real, sorry.