12/8/2008 · Animal experiments are widely used to develop new medicines and to test the safety of other products. Many of these experiments cause pain to the animals .
7/20/2006 · The animal rights answer. The use of animals to entertain human beings is wrong because: it treats the animal as a means to achieve some human end; it fails to treat animals .
7/20/2006 · Animal experimentation – the facts Animal experiments in the UK A liger – half lion, half tiger – has been experimentally bred UK law both requires and regulates experiments on animals .
4/4/2008 · The science Bioethics: Human- animal hybrid embryos Human stem cells ©. In May 2008 a cross-party attempt to ban hybrid human animal embryos was defeated on.
7/20/2006 · Animal experimentation – the double bind The double bind problem. Some philosophers say that people who want to experiment on animals are caught in a double bind.
BBC – Ethics – Animal ethics: Experimenting on animals, Animal experimentation – the facts – BBC, Animal experimentation – the facts – BBC, BBC – Ethics – Animal ethics: Experimenting on animals, 7/20/2006 · Ethics guide. Biotechnology … It’s been suggested that genetic engineering may solve all the ethical problems of laboratory experiments on animals . The goal is to create a genetically engineered …
4/4/2019 · A lot of people don’t realise that in the UK you cannot use an animal for cosmetics testing – or use an animal if there is another way to do an experiment . We spend millions of pounds every year …
12/8/2009 · Animals aren’t ‘moral’ Some of the arguments against animal rights centre on whether animals behave morally. Rights are unique to human beings..
12/12/2006 · A House of Lords Select Committee looked into the workings of the 1986 Animals (Scientific Procedures) Act and reported in 2002. It concluded that while a number of improvements to the present system could be suggested, the broad thrust of the way in which the use of animals for research and testing is regulated in the UK should continue.
7/24/2006 · The chief executive of the National Centre for the Replacement, Refinement and Reduction of Animals in Research (NC3Rs) is considering at what point science might finally be able to give up using animals for research. In the UK, just under 2.9 million animals were used in research in 2005.