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I HAVE asked myself what a mere lawyer can contribute to a discussion of the ethics of medical experimentation. I feel like the hapless first-year law student in Professor "Bull" Warren's class to whom, as he was floundering, the Bull said, "You are in very shallow water, but you are sinking fast!"If you expect an exposition of rules of law regarding medical experiments, I am afraid you will be sorely disappointed, for this is not an area where the law has crystallized into firm, neat rules. To look for such rules would be to emulate the figures of the . . .
Paul A. Freund (Thu,) studied this question.