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Enemies Of Science Haldane P. 225 Essay

HALDANE "Some Enemies of Science" J.B.S. Haldane

The vivisection debate: J.B.S. Haldane's "Some enemies of science"

The vivisection debate is an old one. As early as 1928, the scientist J.B.S. Haldane rigorously defended the practice of vivisection against its earliest detractors, arguing that even moderate government regulation of scientific behavior to protect animal rights was hypocritical, given the way that animals were treated in other spheres of human life. In contrast, David Suzuki's 1989 essay "The pain of animals" highlights the central paradox of animal experimentation. On one hand, animal experiments are only useful because of our biological similarities to animals. On the other hand, we assert our right to exploit animals based upon our inherent differences from them. The intelligence of animals such as the chimpanzee is analogous to a two-year-old child and yet through logical sleight of hand we justify using chimps in the laboratory by calling them 'lesser beings' (Suzuki 15).

Suzuki's essay is riddled with his ethical conflicts. On one hand, he admits he cannot bring himself to hunt -- yet he is an avid fisherman and uses fishing as one of his primary sources of protein. "How do we know that these other creatures don't feel pain and anguish like we do" he asks, in regards to animal suffering (Suzuki 8). For Suzuki, there are no easy answers about the human-animal relationship. In stark contrast, Haldane asserts plainly and simply that animals do not have higher level thought processes and feelings. "I have seen numerous experiments on animals but I have never seen an animal undergoing pain that I would not have been...

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Haldane feels very confident about his ability to assess the degree to which animals feel both physical and mental anguish, in contrast to Suzuki who believes there is a very compelling case that animals (particularly primates) undergo tremendous physical and psychological suffering. Compare the suffering of a chimp in a laboratory cage to one running free, he counsels, and you will see this (Haldane 16). But Haldane argues that animals cannot anticipate suffering like humans or compare their suffering to others, and even suggests that the cooking to death of dogs in an oven is no worse than a hot bath, save the dog's eventual demise. Haldane presupposes knowledge of what animals 'feel' much like those who assert that wild animals are happy in captivity, despite biological hard-wiring to be in large spaces. Haldane's assertion that he would willingly undergo the suffering he inflicts upon animals for the same purpose to be particularly curious -- yes, this may be true of himself, but not even necessarily true of all humans, much less all animals. And the research which is accrued is designed to benefit humans, rather than animals.
In contrast, Suzuki notes that in a raid upon a laboratory, "baby monkeys deprived of any contact with other animals seized the fingers of their liberators and clung to them, as our babies would to us" (Suzuki 14). Haldane would likely say this is a mere physiological response. However, in both humans and apes it is possible that physiological feelings and physical responses are interconnected. In fact, this is something we share with animals and once again underlines our…

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References

Haldane, J.B.S. (2004). Some enemies of science. The Nelson Introduction to Literature (2nd

Ed). Valleau, Al & Jack Finnbogason. (Eds.). Toronto: Thomson Nelson.

Suzuki, David. (2004). The pain of animals. The Nelson Introduction to Literature (2nd

Ed). Valleau, Al & Jack Finnbogason. (Eds.). Toronto: Thomson Nelson.
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