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By: Marilyn E. Carroll, J. Bruce Overmier
ISBN: 1557987882
Publisher: American Psychological Association (APA)
Release Date: August, 2001
Bioscience book rank: 1531955
I heartily recommend Animal Research and Human Health to anyone struggling understand the minds and motivations of those engaged in animal experimentation. The editors offer twenty-two essays that they claim are evidence that we need such research.<p>The editors, Marilyn Carroll and Bruce Overmier, are both well known to the antivisectionist community. Overmier is famous for his learned helplessness studies on dogs involving uncontrollable repeated electroshock. Carroll is well known for her cocaine and PCP (angel dust) experiments on monkeys; Carroll has been the focus of many animal rights and anticruelty demonstrations at the University of Minnesota. It makes sense that these two scientists would have a certain admiration for each other.<p>Carroll and Overmier offer their opinions in an introductory essay that suggests that they are both reasonable and thoughtful. They briefly discuss the various rationales for using animals: biblical, dualistic, evolutionary, and utilitarian, and say that:<p>"...with increasing knowledge we discover unexpectedly more and greater similarities than previously known between humans and animals. At that point, we may begin to limit the kinds of research we undertake with some species of animals (and current regulations for research reflect this)." (p.10)<p>Such a claim must be intended to soothe the reader's concerns or perhaps Carroll and Overmier are simply less than honest even with themselves. Those familiar with animal research regulations will likely scratch their heads and wonder at the claim that some species cannot be used in some types of studies. No such regulations exist outside the minds of Carroll and Overmier.<p>The editors' true colors show up late in the book. They rail: <p>"Those who argue against the use of laboratory animals in research label themselves 'animal rights activists' but, given their behaviors, we scientists believe they may fairly be viewed as 'antiresearch activists'... The antiresearch activists strive to turn logic on its head and give equal value to animals and humans." (p. 339)<p>The main essays are less vitriolic. The essays' authors strive to show the connections between animal research and human health. Klaus A. Miczek's essay, Aggression and Violence (Chapter 4), makes the case with a claim that seems to comport with the notion that animal researchers are a schizophrenic bunch. He says, "A curious fascination with killing pervades [history]... continues into the present such as with organized sports ('blood sports'), ritualized foraging (sport fishing and hunting), entertainment by staging and watching people and animals killing each other,... (human and animal sacrifice), ... 'mercy' killing, and public executions. The determinants of the different kinds of killing behavior have eluded precise analysis, because... most researchers are repulsed." (p. 58) The claim that animal researchers are repulsed by killing must count as among the tallest of all tales, but his point is that, if they could get over their distaste, we might find the root cause of humanity's love of killing by watching animals kill each other.<p>In another essay, Marijuana and Dependence (Chapter 8, A.J. Budney and J. Wiley), the authors lament the fact that DSM-IV, the diagnostic authority of the American Psychiatric Association, notes that marijuana withdrawal symptoms have not been shown to be clinically significant. The authors feel that this is a problem well worth the lives and well-being of various animals. They document the synthesis of a chemical named SR141716A thought to block some of the receptors for THC (the active compound in marijuana) in the brain.<p>After intravenous injections of THC, followed by intravenously administered SR141716A, dogs and rats exhibit "scratching, 'wet-dog shakes,' licking, and muscle spasms." In dogs, the procedure additionally causes "decreased social interaction, increased restlessness, and elicited uncharacteristic circling." (p. 120). Budney and Wiley claim that this proves that marijuana withdrawal can be demonstrated and hope that the use of monkeys and knockout mice will someday be used to finally prove that marijuana is dangerous. <p>All in all, those seeking to understand the minds and motivations of those who experiment on animals will find this text worthwhile. Those who seek to justify any and all uses of animals will undoubtedly cite the text in their appeal to authority.
By: Melissa K. Welch-Ross, Lauren G. Fasig
ISBN: 1412940311
Publisher: Sage Publications, Inc
Release Date: 03 October, 2007
Bioscience book rank: 2375506
By: Norman Cliff, John A. Keats
ISBN: 0805820930
Publisher: Lawrence Erlbaum
Release Date: 01 November, 2002
Bioscience book rank: 1934383
By: Todd A Swanson, Sandra I Kim, Nadeem N Hussain
ISBN: 0781764645
Publisher: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
Release Date: 01 June, 2007
Bioscience book rank: 1796857
By: Patricia E. Erickson, Steven K. Erickson
ISBN: 081354338X
Publisher: Rutgers University Press
Release Date: 30 August, 2008
Bioscience book rank: 2539301
By: Zandra S. Gratz
ISBN: 0534358101
Publisher: Wadsworth Pub Co
Release Date: August, 1998
Bioscience book rank: 1779621
This book is a helpful accessory to the Essentials textbook (also the 3rd edition). The instructions are based on SPSS 8.0 for Windows.
By: H.A. Williams, C.O. Jones
ISBN:
Publisher: Elsevier
Release Date:
Bioscience book rank: 2673067
By: Dr. Robert Savarese, Steven R. Daugherty
ISBN: B000VPFK36
Publisher: Kaplan Medical
Release Date: 2005
Bioscience book rank: 2050647
By: James Raymondo
ISBN: 0070522839
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Humanities/Social Sciences/Languages
Release Date: 02 October, 1998
Bioscience book rank: 1388194
This book is really good book. The content is easy to understand. I borrowed this book from the library at the begining and I found it so good that I decided buy one myself.
By: Jay E. Gould
ISBN: 0849311047
Publisher: CRC
Release Date: 20 December, 2001
Bioscience book rank: 1386232
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