Introduction
Twentieth-century experiments on discriminated groups of people were as cruel and unethical as possible. Although a number of scientific advances and a better understanding of the functioning of the human body were made possible by such research, the violation of human rights by cruel methods is no longer acceptable in today’s diversified society.
Main Body
Society’s desire for equality and the importance of every individual completely rule out the possibility of repeating such inhumane processes.
In today’s realities, such research makes no sense, not only from a moral and ethical point of view. Knowledge about the workings of the human body and the principles of all related processes is known much better than it used to be. Moreover, due to technological advances, there is an opportunity to simulate many of the issues of interest to researchers in virtual space. With the help of massive databases, computer systems are able to make the most accurate analysis, forecast, propose, and evaluate hypotheses in some cases (Rajpurkar et al., 2022). Most of the cruel experiments were conducted on adult and child prisoners precisely for the purpose of understanding genetics, regeneration processes, and features of the human brain (Weindling, 2022). Such information can be studied in depth using new microscopes and analytical systems with virtually no human involvement in today’s realities.
Medications for major diseases that are still incurable have not yet been found, not because of a lack of material or human studies. Most of the delay is due to the lack of specific methods that can selectively affect, for example, cancer cells, leaving surgery as the main intervention (Tsilimigras et al., 2019). All of this is in the development stage and will be found in time without the involvement of cruelty or unethical methods, especially since today’s laws and level of human rights compliance will strive to not give anyone such an opportunity.
Conclusion
The experience of restrictions during the COVID-19 pandemic has become indispensable to all humanity. Undoubtedly, many of the measures taken by various countries have touched on restricting the liberties of citizens and are unethical for many reasons, including freedom violations. However, this situation is new for today’s world society due to the long period that has passed since the last world pandemic. Therefore, the measures would be much more elaborate, effective, and ethical if such a situation arose. Thus, it can be argued that human experience is the basis for knowledge, and non-human experiments should never be repeated.
Reference
Rajpurkar, P., Chen, E., Banerjee, O., & Topol, E. J. (2022). AI in health and medicine. Nature Medicine, 28(1), 31–38. Web.
Tsilimigras, D. I., Bagante, F., Moris, D., Merath, K., Paredes, A. Z., Sahara, K., Ratti, F., Marques, H. P., Soubrane, O., Lam, V., Poultsides, G. A., Popescu, I., Alexandrescu, S., Martel, G., Workneh, A., Guglielmi, A., Hugh, T., Aldrighetti, L., Endo, I., & Pawlik, T. M. (2019). Defining the chance of cure after resection for hepatocellular carcinoma within and beyond the Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer guidelines: A multi-institutional analysis of 1,010 patients. Surgery, 166(6), 967–974. Web.
Weindling, P. (2022). Painful and sometimes deadly experiments which Nazi doctors carried out on children. Acta Paediatrica (Oslo, Norway: 1992), 111(9), 1664–1669. Web.