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Journal of Medical Ethics logoLink to Journal of Medical Ethics
. 1983 Jun;9(2):94–97. doi: 10.1136/jme.9.2.94

Vivisection, morals and medicine

R G Frey 1
PMCID: PMC1059351  PMID: 6876105

Abstract

If one wishes to accept that some painful animal experimentation can be justified on grounds that benefit is conferred, one is faced with a difficult moral dilemma argues the first author, a philosopher. Either one needs to be able to say why human lives of any quality however low should be inviolable from painful experimentation when animal lives are not; or one should accept that sufficient benefit can justify certain painful experiments on human beings of sufficiently low quality of life. Alternatively, one can reject the original premise and accept antivivisectionism. Replies to his paper follow from an antivivisectionist philosopher and an eminent pharmacologist long involved in animal experimentation. Dr Frey responds to both replies.

Keywords: Vivisection; animal experimentation, antivivisectionism; human experimentation; cost-benefit anaiysis; utilitarianism

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