One of the questions facing society today is whether animals should be used in scientific experimentation. For many centuries people have experimented on animals. There are two main reasons for doing this: first, to find out …show more content…
When animals are subjected to experimentation it can produce in them a sense of thwarted agency, diminished selfhood, or ineffectualness, from which suffering often arises. We freely experiment on animals because they cannot revolt against humans or else because they do not know or mind if they are altered from their original state. For instance, if it was necessary to deform a toe of a being for important research, it would be better to use an animal because it would not suffer any type of humiliation from being deformed. In fact, it might not even realize that its toe is …show more content…
And when we consider giving animals good care then it would be adequate to use animals for scientific experiments, the truth is such that millions of animals die each year in experiments or others are not adequately anaesthetized or are abused by handlers and experimenters.
Though many breakthroughs have been made as a result of animal experimentation, many of the drugs that have been approved after animal testing had to be subsequently withdrawn because of harmful side effects. In fact, most experiments done on animals that are nothing like human beings, such as rats and mice. This undermines the dispute that these experiments are a reliable guide to human reactions. Scientifically, as well as morally, most animal experimentation is to be rejected as the reaction of a mouse to a substance is no guide to human reactions. Each species has its own unique