About This Book
The author examines experimental use of live animals, weighing scientific gains against moral cost and questioning whether painful demonstrations—especially in teaching—are justified by their educational value. He argues that unrestricted experimentation can deaden sympathy in medical students and proposes practical reform: oppose immediate total abolition but urge legal prohibition of mutilating or demonstrative painful experiments on lower animals, favor education and professional self-restraint over sudden legislation, and acknowledge that limited, strictly controlled experiments may have utility when they avoid unnecessary suffering.
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