It is important to be able to offer an account of which activities count as scientific research, given our current interest
in promoting research as a means to benefit humankind and in ethically regulating it. We attempt to offer such an account,
arguing that we need to consider both the procedural and functional dimensions of an activity before we can establish whether
it is a genuine instance of scientific research. By placing research in a broader schema of activities, the similarities and
differences between research activities and other activities become visible. It is also easier to show why some activities
that do not count as research can sometimes be confused with research and why some other activities can be regarded only partially
as research. Although the concept of research is important to delimit a class of activities which we might be morally obliged
to promote, we observe that the class of activities which are regarded as subject to ethical regulation is not exhausted by
research activities. We argue that, whether they be research or not, all the activities that are likely to affect the rights
and interests of the individuals involved and impact on the rights and interests of other individuals raise ethical issues
and might be in need of ethical regulation.
Keywords research - ethical regulation - demarcation criterion - research ethics - methodology of science - aims of science - falsification - Popper - freedom of research