Class Dissection Of Live Dog Outrages Parents, Students

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dornick

Senior member
Jan 30, 2005
751
0
0
Originally posted by: BigJ
Originally posted by: dornick
Originally posted by: exilera
Originally posted by: dornick
I really don't see this as such a horrible thing. I mean, it's not like they did it to cause the dog pain, but for educational purposes. Plus, it was sedated.

So because it was for "education", that makes it ok to make an innocent animal suffer. Good point, moron.

Well, I hardly think the dog was suffering much, but yeah pretty much. Now tell me why that's bad.

Just because we CAN do something, doesn't mean we SHOULD do something.

We COULD do this to humans that are about to die, and that would feel no pain.

But should we?

I never said, they SHOULD do it, just that I'm not morally opposed to it. I also draw a line between humans and lower species.
 

jagec

Lifer
Apr 30, 2004
24,442
6
81
Originally posted by: Jzero
LIVE frogs. The procedure is called pithing. You anesthetize a live frog and then sever it's spinal cord.

Never happened at MY school, that's for sure.
 

exilera

Senior member
Apr 12, 2005
940
0
0
Originally posted by: BigJ
Originally posted by: dornick
Originally posted by: exilera
Originally posted by: dornick
I really don't see this as such a horrible thing. I mean, it's not like they did it to cause the dog pain, but for educational purposes. Plus, it was sedated.

So because it was for "education", that makes it ok to make an innocent animal suffer. Good point, moron.

Well, I hardly think the dog was suffering much, but yeah pretty much. Now tell me why that's bad.

Just because we CAN do something, doesn't mean we SHOULD do something.

We COULD do this to humans that are about to die, and that would feel no pain.

But should we?

I have no problem doing it with humans... humans who are being put to death for horrendous crimes. An animal on the other hand, is completely innocent.

I could 'maybe' see this being done for premed students, but in a high school? That's just unecessary.
 

oogabooga

Diamond Member
Jan 14, 2003
7,807
3
81
Dissectoin of living animals isn't as prudent an education tool as it was x years ago. you would figure that they'd have an alternative means to do this. in Bio AP when i was in high school (it feels wierd saying that) we were shown a video of a live frog being cut into to demonstrate the power of his heart,etcetc. We dissected worms that were already dead etc. I just think that there are other ways now to get the point accross that don't involve direct interaction.

I don't think a dog is a person so equating it to death row inmates or whatnot right away is a far fetched. But it does make you wonder where it would stop? would we do it to dolphins? apes? etc? Would human eventually be that far off in the name of 'education'?
 

exilera

Senior member
Apr 12, 2005
940
0
0
Originally posted by: nakedfrog
Originally posted by: exilera
And who sedated it? The teacher? How could they be sure it wouldn't feel anything?

It would probably sure as hell have not just laid there while they cut it open if it wasn't sedated.

Just because it was too sedated to move or offer resistance doesn't mean it didn't feal pain...
 

dornick

Senior member
Jan 30, 2005
751
0
0
Originally posted by: exilera
Originally posted by: BigJ
Originally posted by: dornick
Originally posted by: exilera
Originally posted by: dornick
I really don't see this as such a horrible thing. I mean, it's not like they did it to cause the dog pain, but for educational purposes. Plus, it was sedated.

So because it was for "education", that makes it ok to make an innocent animal suffer. Good point, moron.

Well, I hardly think the dog was suffering much, but yeah pretty much. Now tell me why that's bad.

Just because we CAN do something, doesn't mean we SHOULD do something.

We COULD do this to humans that are about to die, and that would feel no pain.

But should we?

I have no problem doing it with humans... humans who are being put to death for horrendous crimes. An animal on the other hand, is completely innocent.

I could 'maybe' see this being done for premed students, but in a high school? That's just unecessary.

I agree it was unecessary, but not that it was immoral. By the way, there's no such thing as an "innocent" animal or a "guilty" animal: they're just animals. That's the dividing lines between animals and humans.

Note: I don't advocate this on humans.
 

DainBramaged

Lifer
Jun 19, 2003
23,454
41
91
Originally posted by: oogabooga
Dissectoin of living animals isn't as prudent an education tool as it was x years ago. you would figure that they'd have an alternative means to do this. in Bio AP when i was in high school (it feels wierd saying that) we were shown a video of a live frog being cut into to demonstrate the power of his heart,etcetc. We dissected worms that were already dead etc. I just think that there are other ways now to get the point accross that don't involve direct interaction.

I don't think a dog is a person so equating it to death row inmates or whatnot right away is a far fetched. But it does make you wonder where it would stop? would we do it to dolphins? apes? etc? Would human eventually be that far off in the name of 'education'?

Your argument employs usage of the fallacy of a slippery slope. Just because other things may happen does not make this item wrong. Judge it based on what it is.
 

BigJ

Lifer
Nov 18, 2001
21,330
1
81
Originally posted by: DainBramaged
Originally posted by: oogabooga
Dissectoin of living animals isn't as prudent an education tool as it was x years ago. you would figure that they'd have an alternative means to do this. in Bio AP when i was in high school (it feels wierd saying that) we were shown a video of a live frog being cut into to demonstrate the power of his heart,etcetc. We dissected worms that were already dead etc. I just think that there are other ways now to get the point accross that don't involve direct interaction.

I don't think a dog is a person so equating it to death row inmates or whatnot right away is a far fetched. But it does make you wonder where it would stop? would we do it to dolphins? apes? etc? Would human eventually be that far off in the name of 'education'?

Your argument employs usage of the fallacy of a slippery slope. Just because other things may happen does not make this item wrong. Judge it based on what it is.

May happen? It has happened.

There are scientists, even today, that would probably love this to be an accepted practice on human beings.
 

upsciLLion

Diamond Member
Feb 21, 2001
5,947
1
81
Sedating something is easy. Sedating them so that they wake up afterward is pretty difficult. That's why anesthesiologists are paid so much. The euthanisia was probably performed by giving it too much anesthesia which takes some time to occur, which is probably when the disection was performed.
 

jagec

Lifer
Apr 30, 2004
24,442
6
81
Originally posted by: exilera
Originally posted by: nakedfrog
Originally posted by: exilera
And who sedated it? The teacher? How could they be sure it wouldn't feel anything?

It would probably sure as hell have not just laid there while they cut it open if it wasn't sedated.

Just because it was too sedated to move or offer resistance doesn't mean it didn't feal pain...

*le sigh*

Boy, I bet your anesthesiologist just LOVES you.
 

cjchaps

Diamond Member
Jul 24, 2000
3,013
1
81
Comparing a dog is is going to be killed, and a human with AIDs is a dumb comparison. The human will die, but not on purpose, and not tomorrow. The dog is going to be killed no matter what, so why not get some educational use out of it. I personally would opt out of that section of the class, and not watch it, but I wouldn't protest it.

BTW: In my HS we had a live frog, which the teacher gave a frontal labotomy too, then she cut it open in front of us so we could see the hear/lungs/organs working.
 

Linflas

Lifer
Jan 30, 2001
15,395
78
91
Originally posted by: dornick
Originally posted by: exilera
Originally posted by: BigJ
Originally posted by: dornick
Originally posted by: exilera
Originally posted by: dornick
I really don't see this as such a horrible thing. I mean, it's not like they did it to cause the dog pain, but for educational purposes. Plus, it was sedated.

So because it was for "education", that makes it ok to make an innocent animal suffer. Good point, moron.

Well, I hardly think the dog was suffering much, but yeah pretty much. Now tell me why that's bad.

Just because we CAN do something, doesn't mean we SHOULD do something.

We COULD do this to humans that are about to die, and that would feel no pain.

But should we?

I have no problem doing it with humans... humans who are being put to death for horrendous crimes. An animal on the other hand, is completely innocent.

I could 'maybe' see this being done for premed students, but in a high school? That's just unecessary.

I agree it was unecessary, but not that it was immoral. By the way, there's no such thing as an "innocent" animal or a "guilty" animal: they're just animals. That's the dividing lines between animals and humans.

Note: I don't advocate this on humans.

Amazing, all you have to do to justify almost any inhumane behavior is to term it "they are just animals" as if that somehow makes them not suffer and feel terror at what is being done to them.
 

DainBramaged

Lifer
Jun 19, 2003
23,454
41
91
Originally posted by: BigJ
Originally posted by: DainBramaged
Originally posted by: oogabooga
Dissectoin of living animals isn't as prudent an education tool as it was x years ago. you would figure that they'd have an alternative means to do this. in Bio AP when i was in high school (it feels wierd saying that) we were shown a video of a live frog being cut into to demonstrate the power of his heart,etcetc. We dissected worms that were already dead etc. I just think that there are other ways now to get the point accross that don't involve direct interaction.

I don't think a dog is a person so equating it to death row inmates or whatnot right away is a far fetched. But it does make you wonder where it would stop? would we do it to dolphins? apes? etc? Would human eventually be that far off in the name of 'education'?

Your argument employs usage of the fallacy of a slippery slope. Just because other things may happen does not make this item wrong. Judge it based on what it is.

May happen? It has happened.

There are scientists, even today, that would probably love this to be an accepted practice on human beings.

So, because a handful of sick scientists might want to do similar experiments on humans, it makes it wrong to do it on a dog. Bad analogy.
 

Armitage

Banned
Feb 23, 2001
8,086
0
0
Originally posted by: BigJ
Originally posted by: DainBramaged
Originally posted by: oogabooga
Dissectoin of living animals isn't as prudent an education tool as it was x years ago. you would figure that they'd have an alternative means to do this. in Bio AP when i was in high school (it feels wierd saying that) we were shown a video of a live frog being cut into to demonstrate the power of his heart,etcetc. We dissected worms that were already dead etc. I just think that there are other ways now to get the point accross that don't involve direct interaction.

I don't think a dog is a person so equating it to death row inmates or whatnot right away is a far fetched. But it does make you wonder where it would stop? would we do it to dolphins? apes? etc? Would human eventually be that far off in the name of 'education'?

Your argument employs usage of the fallacy of a slippery slope. Just because other things may happen does not make this item wrong. Judge it based on what it is.

May happen? It has happened.

There are scientists, even today, that would probably love this to be an accepted practice on human beings.

But see, most of us can understand the distinction between humans & animals, so that just isn't going to happen.
 

dornick

Senior member
Jan 30, 2005
751
0
0
Originally posted by: Linflas
Originally posted by: dornick
Originally posted by: exilera
Originally posted by: BigJ
Originally posted by: dornick
Originally posted by: exilera
Originally posted by: dornick
I really don't see this as such a horrible thing. I mean, it's not like they did it to cause the dog pain, but for educational purposes. Plus, it was sedated.

So because it was for "education", that makes it ok to make an innocent animal suffer. Good point, moron.

Well, I hardly think the dog was suffering much, but yeah pretty much. Now tell me why that's bad.

Just because we CAN do something, doesn't mean we SHOULD do something.

We COULD do this to humans that are about to die, and that would feel no pain.

But should we?

I have no problem doing it with humans... humans who are being put to death for horrendous crimes. An animal on the other hand, is completely innocent.

I could 'maybe' see this being done for premed students, but in a high school? That's just unecessary.

I agree it was unecessary, but not that it was immoral. By the way, there's no such thing as an "innocent" animal or a "guilty" animal: they're just animals. That's the dividing lines between animals and humans.

Note: I don't advocate this on humans.

Amazing, all you have to do to justify almost any inhumane behavior is to term it "they are just animals" as if that somehow makes them not suffer and feel terror at what is being done to them.

I never said it doesn't make them suffer, or feel pain. I think you're an evil person if you needlessly torture an animal. However, if you have a decent reason, and the pain is a side effect, why is it bad?
 

BigJ

Lifer
Nov 18, 2001
21,330
1
81
Originally posted by: Armitage
Originally posted by: BigJ
Originally posted by: DainBramaged
Originally posted by: oogabooga
Dissectoin of living animals isn't as prudent an education tool as it was x years ago. you would figure that they'd have an alternative means to do this. in Bio AP when i was in high school (it feels wierd saying that) we were shown a video of a live frog being cut into to demonstrate the power of his heart,etcetc. We dissected worms that were already dead etc. I just think that there are other ways now to get the point accross that don't involve direct interaction.

I don't think a dog is a person so equating it to death row inmates or whatnot right away is a far fetched. But it does make you wonder where it would stop? would we do it to dolphins? apes? etc? Would human eventually be that far off in the name of 'education'?

Your argument employs usage of the fallacy of a slippery slope. Just because other things may happen does not make this item wrong. Judge it based on what it is.

May happen? It has happened.

There are scientists, even today, that would probably love this to be an accepted practice on human beings.

But see, most of us can understand the distinction between humans & animals, so that just isn't going to happen.

Yes, so can I.

But I fail to see why and how, if this is for the sake of science, you feel it is that much different between a person that will die (100% absolutely) that will feel absolutely no pain, and an animal in the same position.

If it's for the sake of science, why should the distinction matter?
 

DainBramaged

Lifer
Jun 19, 2003
23,454
41
91
Originally posted by: BigJ
Originally posted by: Armitage
Originally posted by: BigJ
Originally posted by: DainBramaged
Originally posted by: oogabooga
Dissectoin of living animals isn't as prudent an education tool as it was x years ago. you would figure that they'd have an alternative means to do this. in Bio AP when i was in high school (it feels wierd saying that) we were shown a video of a live frog being cut into to demonstrate the power of his heart,etcetc. We dissected worms that were already dead etc. I just think that there are other ways now to get the point accross that don't involve direct interaction.

I don't think a dog is a person so equating it to death row inmates or whatnot right away is a far fetched. But it does make you wonder where it would stop? would we do it to dolphins? apes? etc? Would human eventually be that far off in the name of 'education'?

Your argument employs usage of the fallacy of a slippery slope. Just because other things may happen does not make this item wrong. Judge it based on what it is.

May happen? It has happened.

There are scientists, even today, that would probably love this to be an accepted practice on human beings.

But see, most of us can understand the distinction between humans & animals, so that just isn't going to happen.

Yes, so can I.

But I fail to see why and how, if this is for the sake of science, you feel it is that much different between a person that will die (100% absolutely) that will feel absolutely no pain, and an animal in the same position.

If it's for the sake of science, why should the distinction matter?

You seem to be implying that you think it's very similar. So you are saying that it's the *same* thing to dissect a live dog and a live person? If so, you are seriously messed up.
 

91TTZ

Lifer
Jan 31, 2005
14,374
1
0
I think people's religion gets into this debate because in Christianity, there is a distinct difference between a human and an animal. I'm not religious, and in my mind there isn't much of a distinction. Yes, a human is a differenct species than an ape, a dolphin, or a frog. But we are still technically animals, there's nothing in the classification of the animal kingdom that makes humans special. We're just a highly evolved form of primate.

There are also a lot of people that I'd rather euthanise than a dog.
 

Linflas

Lifer
Jan 30, 2001
15,395
78
91
Originally posted by: dornick
Originally posted by: Linflas
Originally posted by: dornick
Originally posted by: exilera
Originally posted by: BigJ
Originally posted by: dornick
Originally posted by: exilera
Originally posted by: dornick
I really don't see this as such a horrible thing. I mean, it's not like they did it to cause the dog pain, but for educational purposes. Plus, it was sedated.

So because it was for "education", that makes it ok to make an innocent animal suffer. Good point, moron.

Well, I hardly think the dog was suffering much, but yeah pretty much. Now tell me why that's bad.

Just because we CAN do something, doesn't mean we SHOULD do something.

We COULD do this to humans that are about to die, and that would feel no pain.

But should we?

I have no problem doing it with humans... humans who are being put to death for horrendous crimes. An animal on the other hand, is completely innocent.

I could 'maybe' see this being done for premed students, but in a high school? That's just unecessary.

I agree it was unecessary, but not that it was immoral. By the way, there's no such thing as an "innocent" animal or a "guilty" animal: they're just animals. That's the dividing lines between animals and humans.

Note: I don't advocate this on humans.

Amazing, all you have to do to justify almost any inhumane behavior is to term it "they are just animals" as if that somehow makes them not suffer and feel terror at what is being done to them.

I never said it doesn't make them suffer, or feel pain. I think you're an evil person if you needlessly torture an animal. However, if you have a decent reason, and the pain is a side effect, why is it bad?

A decent reason is eating, not so 30 teenagers can see the wonders of the digestive system in a live animal.
 

dornick

Senior member
Jan 30, 2005
751
0
0
Originally posted by: Linflas
A decent reason is eating, not so 30 teenagers can see the wonders of the digestive system in a live animal.

How did you decide that?
 

Crono

Lifer
Aug 8, 2001
23,720
1,503
136
All I have to say is that you can't compare animals to humans. Does that mean they should be killed or harmed unnecessarily? No. But I don't think it's wrong for medical testing or for educational purposes, but maybe it's not appropriate for elementary school.
 

shimsham

Lifer
May 9, 2002
10,765
0
0
Originally posted by: SampSon
Originally posted by: shimsham
what a bastard.

how the fvck did he get that far without the school catching on?
ps, read the article retard.


why, when i can get the intellectual juggernaut that is atot to point out the details for me? not like a care all that much what they do out in utah.

if the teacher and school thinks its a valid exercise, and the parents were notified before hand, i dont see the problem. they dont like it, opt the kid out.
 

DainBramaged

Lifer
Jun 19, 2003
23,454
41
91
Originally posted by: 91TTZ
I think people's religion gets into this debate because in Christianity, there is a distinct difference between a human and an animal. I'm not religious, and in my mind there isn't much of a distinction. Yes, a human is a differenct species than an ape, a dolphin, or a frog. But we are still technically animals, there's nothing in the classification of the animal kingdom that makes humans special. We're just a highly evolved form of primate.

There are also a lot of people that I'd rather euthanise than a dog.

People are quite far removed from animals. Even assuming evolution, the fact that people are able to have a state of conscious being is enough to seperate us from animals by a great amount.
 

myusername

Diamond Member
Jun 8, 2003
5,046
0
0
I didn't read the article, but I want to weigh in with my uneducated opinion anyway.

1. This would have been acceptable back when there was a chance of someone actually learning something new from it. Like in 1860. Of course, they wouldn't have bothered with anaesthesia then, but still - we've progressed, haven't we?

2. The primary shock is the setting. I would have no problem believing this happens to tens of thousands of animals annualy in government or private labs. That doesn't mean I like it, but the fact of the matter is that when weighed out in a relative fashion, this really doesn't deserve any more attention than someone wearing a fur coat.

3. Morally, I think that the primary crime is split between the intent of killing the animal, and the fact that the purpose is spectacle.
[*]If you want to sedate and totally dismantle a dog, I think you have an obligation to try and put him back together when you are done, regardless of the probablility of success. At least then, you are learning a generative process. There is little skill, little art and little practical use in destroying things.