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Insulin

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  • F Fred_Smith

    No, what I'm saying is is that "better" is no excuse for it anyway. Why else did everyone jump on CataclysmicQuantum when he suggested using convicted murderers and rapists in experiments - after all, we're all "better" than them, aren't we? And the scientific argument is a separate one - it will stand or fall on its own, irrespective of the morality, crazy or otherwise, of it's proponents.

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    Stan Shannon
    wrote on last edited by
    #14

    Fred_Smith wrote:

    Why else did everyone jump on CataclysmicQuantum when he suggested using convicted murderers and rapists in experiments

    Because they are people and have rights. If animals want rights they should fight for them - maybe set up a little doggy congress of some kind. Publish a manifesto perhaps. :rolleyes:

    The only conspiracies that concern me are the ones I am completely unaware of. By the time I find out about it, its probably a done deal. Nothing in the entire universe is more useless than morality without authority. A morality free of hypocrisy is no morality at all.

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    • F Fred_Smith

      First off - the scientific argument against vivisection is precicely that it DOES NOT adn WILL NOT give results beneficial ti human society/medicine, and that in fact it has hindered research in this area.

      Stan Shannon wrote:

      Why? Because we are better than they are,

      The Nazi's believed they were better than Jews - did that give them the right to exterminate them (or, indeed, experiment on them as some did?) Whites used to believe they were better than Blacks - did that give us the right to enslave them? What a stupid argument. Besides, I don't really care about the morality of it all - if you want to believe you have a right to do it then fine you just go ahead and believe it. But you are still scientifically in the wrong, as far as I am concerned.

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      Stan Shannon
      wrote on last edited by
      #15

      Fred_Smith wrote:

      First off - the scientific argument against vivisection is precicely that it DOES NOT adn WILL NOT give results beneficial ti human society/medicine, and that in fact it has hindered research in this area.

      Clearly, those scientists who use it disagree.

      The only conspiracies that concern me are the ones I am completely unaware of. By the time I find out about it, its probably a done deal. Nothing in the entire universe is more useless than morality without authority. A morality free of hypocrisy is no morality at all.

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      • L Lost User

        Subjective or not, that is what we have. If the law is wrong or is unnecessarily vague, then it should be amended. However, this statement from http://www.cmf.org.uk/literature/content.asp?context=article&id=747[^] appears to validate why animal experimentation has merit of sorts. "About one third of animals are used in drug development. Animal testing of medicines has been required by law in the US and UK for many years. In both countries, testing became a legal requirement after disasters involving drugs that had not been first tested on animals. In the US an early sulphonamide antibiotic killed 137 people in 1937, whereas UK legislation followed thalidomide, which caused 10,000 babies to be born with severe limb deformities around the world. In both cases animal testing would have revealed these serious side effects."

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        Fred_Smith
        wrote on last edited by
        #16

        Richard A. Abbott wrote:

        whereas UK legislation followed thalidomide, which caused 10,000 babies to be born with severe limb deformities around the world. In both cases animal testing would have revealed these serious side effects

        Thalidomide WAS tested on animals! Worse than that, as a direct result of these tests it was specifically aimed at pregnant women. In Germany, in 1970, the (then) longest trial in their criminal history acquitted a German company, Chemie Grumenthal, of responsibility for their part in this tragedy after a long line of international medical authorities had testified that animal tests could never be conclusive for human beings. Talk about having your cake and eating it too...

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        • F Fred_Smith

          Richard A. Abbott wrote:

          whereas UK legislation followed thalidomide, which caused 10,000 babies to be born with severe limb deformities around the world. In both cases animal testing would have revealed these serious side effects

          Thalidomide WAS tested on animals! Worse than that, as a direct result of these tests it was specifically aimed at pregnant women. In Germany, in 1970, the (then) longest trial in their criminal history acquitted a German company, Chemie Grumenthal, of responsibility for their part in this tragedy after a long line of international medical authorities had testified that animal tests could never be conclusive for human beings. Talk about having your cake and eating it too...

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          Lost User
          wrote on last edited by
          #17

          If the reference I used was wrong, then you have my apologies.

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          • S Stan Shannon

            Fred_Smith wrote:

            First off - the scientific argument against vivisection is precicely that it DOES NOT adn WILL NOT give results beneficial ti human society/medicine, and that in fact it has hindered research in this area.

            Clearly, those scientists who use it disagree.

            The only conspiracies that concern me are the ones I am completely unaware of. By the time I find out about it, its probably a done deal. Nothing in the entire universe is more useless than morality without authority. A morality free of hypocrisy is no morality at all.

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            Fred_Smith
            wrote on last edited by
            #18

            Stan Shannon wrote:

            Clearly, those scientists who use it disagree.

            Yes, they do. And all I'm arguing is there are plenty of respected scientists who hold the opposing view too - that not everyoen that does so is a crank. So therefore can we please stick to debating the science and not the sanity of those who hold their respective views. There are two aspects to this debate: the scientific and the moral. The moral debate is a waste of time, IMHO, as it is a personal and subjective choice. And the scientific one will stand or fall INDEPENDENTLY of it. It doesn;t matter if I am a total loony as regards my moral attotude to humand vs animals, the sciewnce is still the same. My feelings may well make me lean one way or another, but science is, or should be, objective and its arguments should hold up whatever.

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            • F Fred_Smith

              Stan Shannon wrote:

              Clearly, those scientists who use it disagree.

              Yes, they do. And all I'm arguing is there are plenty of respected scientists who hold the opposing view too - that not everyoen that does so is a crank. So therefore can we please stick to debating the science and not the sanity of those who hold their respective views. There are two aspects to this debate: the scientific and the moral. The moral debate is a waste of time, IMHO, as it is a personal and subjective choice. And the scientific one will stand or fall INDEPENDENTLY of it. It doesn;t matter if I am a total loony as regards my moral attotude to humand vs animals, the sciewnce is still the same. My feelings may well make me lean one way or another, but science is, or should be, objective and its arguments should hold up whatever.

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              Stan Shannon
              wrote on last edited by
              #19

              I think all of you guys who make this same basic argument, that scientific debate equates to scientific absolutism in defense of some social or political agenda, are no different from the intelligent design creationists. Science is not perfect and never will be. There are no absolute truths in science. None. When push comes to shove, when in doubt, science should always err on the side of benefit to humanity. If there is any reason at all to believe that some desease might be better understood if observed in other animals, those animals should be used in experiments. Your arguments are wrong for the same reason that fat boys global warming arguments are wrong, or why anti-torture arguments are wrong or why intelligent design arguments are wrong. Sciece is a method for formulating questions, not a method for providing absolute answers to any given question. You need religion for that.

              The only conspiracies that concern me are the ones I am completely unaware of. By the time I find out about it, its probably a done deal. Nothing in the entire universe is more useless than morality without authority. A morality free of hypocrisy is no morality at all.

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              • S Stan Shannon

                I think all of you guys who make this same basic argument, that scientific debate equates to scientific absolutism in defense of some social or political agenda, are no different from the intelligent design creationists. Science is not perfect and never will be. There are no absolute truths in science. None. When push comes to shove, when in doubt, science should always err on the side of benefit to humanity. If there is any reason at all to believe that some desease might be better understood if observed in other animals, those animals should be used in experiments. Your arguments are wrong for the same reason that fat boys global warming arguments are wrong, or why anti-torture arguments are wrong or why intelligent design arguments are wrong. Sciece is a method for formulating questions, not a method for providing absolute answers to any given question. You need religion for that.

                The only conspiracies that concern me are the ones I am completely unaware of. By the time I find out about it, its probably a done deal. Nothing in the entire universe is more useless than morality without authority. A morality free of hypocrisy is no morality at all.

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                Fred_Smith
                wrote on last edited by
                #20

                Weel, you have a certian point, but mine is that we can at least argue about the science of things, whereas there is little point in arguing about the morality of it, just as there is little point in arguments about the existence of God - people will believe what they believe; at least in the scientific realm there is emprical evidence and experiment to argue about.

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                • F Fred_Smith

                  First off - the scientific argument against vivisection is precicely that it DOES NOT adn WILL NOT give results beneficial ti human society/medicine, and that in fact it has hindered research in this area.

                  Stan Shannon wrote:

                  Why? Because we are better than they are,

                  The Nazi's believed they were better than Jews - did that give them the right to exterminate them (or, indeed, experiment on them as some did?) Whites used to believe they were better than Blacks - did that give us the right to enslave them? What a stupid argument. Besides, I don't really care about the morality of it all - if you want to believe you have a right to do it then fine you just go ahead and believe it. But you are still scientifically in the wrong, as far as I am concerned.

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                  Dan Neely
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #21

                  Fred_Smith wrote:

                  The Nazi's believed they were better than Jews -

                  BZZZT Godwins law. Discussion over. You lose.

                  -- Join the Campaign to Help Stamp Out and Abolish Redundancy The preceding is courtesy of the Bureau of Unnecessarily Redundant Repetition Department.

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                  • D Dan Neely

                    Fred_Smith wrote:

                    The Nazi's believed they were better than Jews -

                    BZZZT Godwins law. Discussion over. You lose.

                    -- Join the Campaign to Help Stamp Out and Abolish Redundancy The preceding is courtesy of the Bureau of Unnecessarily Redundant Repetition Department.

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                    Fred_Smith
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #22

                    :) Touche - but, Godwin's Law only states that the liklihood of Nazi compariosons appraoches 1 as the number of messages increases, but it (purposefully) avoids making any reference as to the validity of such claims.

                    modified on Thursday, December 06, 2007 10:56:31 AM

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                    • F Fred_Smith

                      :) Touche - but, Godwin's Law only states that the liklihood of Nazi compariosons appraoches 1 as the number of messages increases, but it (purposefully) avoids making any reference as to the validity of such claims.

                      modified on Thursday, December 06, 2007 10:56:31 AM

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                      Dan Neely
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #23

                      it's usage is to declare the thread over and the committer of the reducto ad hitler the loser by default.

                      -- Join the Campaign to Help Stamp Out and Abolish Redundancy The preceding is courtesy of the Bureau of Unnecessarily Redundant Repetition Department.

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