Ethical Dilemma

A doctor who studies brain functions has an interesting problem related to his research (beyond the actual research itself). In his studies, he develops various chemicals, which he injects into rats in order to study how their brains process information and react to various stimuli.
The ethical dilemma isn’t what he does to the rats or anything else he himself does. The problem is that most of the chemicals he develops are hallucinogenic in nature, related to LSD or ecstasy. Various people have discovered his work and monitor the professional journals where his results are published. They then take the descriptions of the chemicals and fabricate them and use them or sell them to others as recreational drugs.
In at least a couple of instances, these drugs have led to the deaths of some of the users. Naturally, he feels that he had some part in those deaths, albeit a pretty small part.
Among his choices for dealing with this is withholding the exact composition of these chemicals from his articles, which would make it difficult for others to verify, validate, and expand upon his work. Scientific research often leads to technologies that are both helpful and harmful. This is such a case.


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Darren
Darren
January 7, 2011 6:38 pm

If there is any reason to believe the publication of the Dr.’s drugs can be used for good, and that’s definitely his intent, then keep publishing them. The fact that others are making the wrong choice with his work falls squarely on their heads, not his.

bob42
January 7, 2011 5:16 pm

Celestial bodies must be in rare alignment. We seem to be in unanimous agreement. Can’t you feel the love? 😉
In reading about Carl Sagan’s “stoner days” (early 30s until his death) this morning, I noted that he refused to try heavy duty hallucinogens because those substances are so concentrated it’s impossible to accurately control dosage.

Hamous
January 7, 2011 4:44 pm

I agree with TexMo – It’s no more the Dr’s fault that idiots misuse his formula than it’s Samuel Colt’s fault that his invention was used to rob banks.

El Gordo
January 7, 2011 4:31 pm

Don’t you really think we should nanny the scientific community and restrict their research results to only those who are qualified to read such things. We are already too stupid to take care of ourselves, to provide for ourselves, to read for ourselves, to listen to the radio for ourselves, and to feed ourselves. By restricting information even further, the… Read more »

bob42
January 7, 2011 4:29 pm

I concur. The top of the Pandora’s box of science and technology opens wider as time goes by. On the bright side they do much good for humanity. A free people will inevitably make mistakes.

Adee
January 7, 2011 4:26 pm

Well said, TexMo. Free will manifest in free choice is the key to misuse of the doctor’s work, as it is key to misuse of anything.

TexMo
TexMo
January 7, 2011 4:17 pm

There will always be evil in this world and life is about choices. I can understand the Dr. feeling remotely responsible, however, he should not dwell on it or allow it to interfere with his work. As a parallel consider suicide or murder. There are scores of methods to achieve the end goal that involve implements and instruments whose primary… Read more »

Darren
Darren
January 7, 2011 6:38 pm

If there is any reason to believe the publication of the Dr.’s drugs can be used for good, and that’s definitely his intent, then keep publishing them. The fact that others are making the wrong choice with his work falls squarely on their heads, not his.

OletimerLin
OletimerLin
January 7, 2011 5:16 pm

Celestial bodies must be in rare alignment. We seem to be in unanimous agreement. Can’t you feel the love? 😉

In reading about Carl Sagan’s “stoner days” (early 30s until his death) this morning, I noted that he refused to try heavy duty hallucinogens because those substances are so concentrated it’s impossible to accurately control dosage.

Super Dave
January 7, 2011 4:31 pm

Don’t you really think we should nanny the scientific community and restrict their research results to only those who are qualified to read such things. We are already too stupid to take care of ourselves, to provide for ourselves, to read for ourselves, to listen to the radio for ourselves, and to feed ourselves. By restricting information even further, the… Read more »

OletimerLin
OletimerLin
January 7, 2011 4:29 pm

I concur. The top of the Pandora’s box of science and technology opens wider as time goes by. On the bright side they do much good for humanity. A free people will inevitably make mistakes.

Adee
Adee
January 7, 2011 4:26 pm

Well said, TexMo. Free will manifest in free choice is the key to misuse of the doctor’s work, as it is key to misuse of anything.

Adee
January 7, 2011 4:17 pm

There will always be evil in this world and life is about choices. I can understand the Dr. feeling remotely responsible, however, he should not dwell on it or allow it to interfere with his work. As a parallel consider suicide or murder. There are scores of methods to achieve the end goal that involve implements and instruments whose primary… Read more »