English 101
25 November 2014
Animal testing; an ethical dilemma
We, as humans, have made abundant developments in the world. The human population have securely recognized the scientific advancement, but in doing so, it seems that our ideas and morals have miscarried to progress as well. The realization we have developed is extraordinary, but with it comes obligation to use it wisely and ethically. For some, torment and heartlessly kill creatures that the unpleasantly consider lesser beings simply are at our disposal. For something as simple as eye makeup animals are tortured and blinded by tests performed at the laboratory. The innocent creature are hardly fed, often forced to live in filth, and sometimes have their vocal …show more content…
Animals and people are similar in numerous ways; they together feel, think, behave, love, and are familiarity with pain. Consequently, all living breathing organisms should be treated with the same respect as human beings. However animals ' rights are despoiled when they are used in study and research because they are not given a choice they don’t ultimately don’t even have a choice. Animals are exposed to tests that are often throbbing or cause everlasting damage or bereavement, and they are never given the opportunity of not contributing in the experimentations. Animals do not willingly sacrifice themselves for the advancement of human welfare and new technology. Their decisions are made for them because they cannot vocalize their own preferences and choices. When humans select the outcome of animals in research environments, the animals ' privileges are taken away without any alleged of their well-being or the value of their …show more content…
When animals are used for product toxicity testing or laboratory research, they are subjected to painful and frequently deadly experiments. Two of the most commonly used toxicity tests are the Draize test and the LD50 test, both of which are infamous for the intense pain and suffering they inflect upon experimental animals. PETA statements to the acute toxicity tests determines the toxic consequences of a single, short-term exposure to a product or chemical, the substance is administered to animals (usually rodents) in extremely high doses via force-feeding, forced inhalation, and/or absorption through the skin. Animals in the highest-dose groups may endure severe abdominal pain, diarrhea, convulsions, seizures, paralysis, and bleeding from the nose, mouth, and genitals before they ultimately die. In the Draize test the substance or product being tested is placed in the eyes of an animal (generally a rabbit is used for this test); then the animal is monitored for damage to the cornea and other tissues in and near the eye. This test is intensely painful for the animal, and blindness, scarring, and death are generally the end results. The Draize test has been criticized for being unreliable and a needless waste of animal life. The LD50 test is used to test the dosage of a substance that is necessary to cause death in fifty percent of the animal subjects within a certain