Experimenting with Humans and Animals: from Aristotle to Crispr, second edition

Anita Guerrini
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Research staff and students, who are required to remain on budget with their projects, are put under increasing pressure and stress in order to take better care of their laboratory animals without receiving compensation or support. In the meantime, almost nobody seems to care to know how many animals were sacrificed to develop the celebrated COVID-19 vaccines. Are we, biomedical researchers, ever going to have a resolution to this ethical tension around us? Are we going to be viewed by future historians as the heroes of science--or as abusers of living creatures? *Anita Guerrini's Experimenting with Humans and Animals: From Aristotle to CRISPR does not answer the question. As the author states in the beginning of her book, her objective is to tell the history of \"trial and error, prejudice and leaps of faith, clashing egos and budget battles,\" to help us evaluate \"the value, and the values, of Western science,\" and to \"influence the future.\" In other words, the purpose of the book is not to make ethical arguments or to appraise a certain aspect of historical development, such as the progress of ethical care for human and animal subjects. It is, rather, to reveal the reality that ethical views and sentiments have changed, collided, merged, and contradicted each other across time and political landscapes. *This text poses questions, implicitly and explicitly, to enable us to address some of the issues and challenges we are facing at present. A first question arises from the history of vivisection (chap. 1). Vivisection refers to experimenting with (mostly dissecting) live animals, and sometimes even humans. This appears for the first time in recorded history back in ancient Greece, meaning it was practiced for two millennia without anesthesia, a discovery not made until the eighteenth century. More strikingly, vivisection was done as part of \"edutainment\" shows in ancient times. Criticism of the practice was not necessarily about the cruelty but rather about the usefulness of the knowledge obtained from dying or dead animals. The rights or well-being of animals were not much of an issue in the ancient age as human dominion was a firmly held belief. Such an ethical view continued to be dominant until early Modernity (seventeenth-century Europe) when human and animal bodies alike were viewed as machines, and animal experimentation began to be accepted as a cardinal method for biomedical sciences (chap. 2). At that time, ethical concerns on the use of animals did arise, but the concern lay rather in the human virtues of kindness and compassion rather than the rights of animals. *Eighteenth-century Europe slipped into a new stage of biomedical science after Queen Mary II of England died of smallpox, from which experimentation with humans becomes central (chap. 3). Inoculation, adopted from the Eastern world with initial suspicions, was slowly gaining credibility through parents who were unwilling to put their children at the risk of falling ill to smallpox. The validation of its effectiveness eventually came about upon testing with the socially marginalized, including prisoners, orphans, patients, and slaves. Yet criticisms around the \"science\" of inoculation were not made for using the marginalized as test subjects but rather for superseding God's authority to cause one to be ill or healed. While an increasing number of animal experiments were conducted routinely, and mathematical descriptions of the body became of greater interest to scientists, the emerging utilitarian ethics began to awaken Europeans, especially the British, to the suffering of animals. While elevated sensitivity to animal suffering led to \"antivivisection\" movements in England, experimental medicine and physiology were established as scientific fields. During this period nation-states also began to be involved in science. This was also the time when anesthesia was discovered, and pain perception became an important topic in physiology. Eventually, common beliefs about racial or sexual differences in pain perception were also tested, by experimenting with women and black slaves. *In the late nineteenth century, animal experimentation made a strong comeback as the germ theory of disease was solidly validated by scientists such as Pasteur, Koch, and Ehrlich (chap. 5). As scientists began to conquer many diseases such as anthrax, rabies, syphilis, and tuberculosis, the victory of science quenched the antivivisectionist movement. A number of animals, including rabbits, guinea pigs, dogs, and monkeys, were used to test theories, vaccines, and drugs during this period. At the same time, human experimentation begins to be regulated by states, but the regulation was so elementary that practices were allowed that would not be tolerated in our time. Concerns with animal experimentation reemerged in the twentieth century when polio research, strongly advocated by Franklin Roosevelt, a victim of polio himself, claimed a striking number of rhesus monkey lives (chap. 6). As an example, in the 1950s, the United States imported from India 200,000 rhesus monkeys per year for polio research. Despite the polio vaccine's success, primate research appalled the public, especially when behavioral research on primates revealed the emotional depth and social intelligence of these animals. Animals came to be seen no longer just as machines, but as our cousins who, like us, have consciousness. *The last chapter begins by depicting the Nuremberg War Crimes Tribunal of 1946, which led to the first written set of guidelines for human experimentation. Up until this time, there had been little consensus or regulation in using humans for experiments, let alone with the requirement that they must be mentally competent, uncoerced, and fully aware of possible consequences. It is hence not surprising that scientists under the Nazis defended themselves against charges of abuse and euthanasia of human subjects by paralleling their conduct with the practices of contemporary American scientists. American practice was exemplified by the Tuskegee Study of Untreated Syphilis in the Negro Male, conducted from the 1930s to the 1970s, in which the United States Public Health Service left four hundred black syphilis-infected males untreated, without telling them that their treatment had been stopped, in order to study the natural development of untreated syphilis. More than one hundred died as a result. Inconsistency in research ethics can also be found in the case of Japanese scientists, who, in contrast to Germans, were pardoned for their research conduct during World War II in return for providing information to the United States. Nonetheless, through the twentieth century until today, the level of public awareness and national regulations on the use of animal and human subjects has been progressively elevated. Yet, accelerated advances in research technology, including the latest breakthrough of gene editing, and expansion of research fields, continue to add complexity to ethical discourses. *I was impressed by Guerrini's vast knowledge of the historical development of biomedical science, including the events that matter to ethical issues around use of animal and human subjects in research. At the same time, she manages to make the book concise. While the book concerns the ethics of animal and human experimentation, it is certainly not an ethics or philosophy book but rather a story book. That is, while the book raises ethical questions in an unbiased manner, the chronological organization of this story does not conveniently lend itself to efforts to systematically examine or establish ethical principles on these matters. 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引用次数: 1

Abstract

EXPERIMENTING WITH HUMANS AND ANIMALS: From Aristotle to CRISPR, second edition by Anita Guerrini. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2022. viii + 208 pages. Paperback; $28.95. ISBN: 9781421444055. *There has been a haunting thought ever since I began to use live mammals for my research in neurophysiology: "Will my descendants accuse me of cruelty towards animals as much as we do to the scientists under the Nazis?" A number of neurophysiologists have been threatened and attacked to stop their research, and, as a consequence, there are few neurophysiologists left using rhesus monkeys along the West coastline of the US and Canada. Research with rats is increasingly of concern to some, and mice might be the next subject of attention. Research staff and students, who are required to remain on budget with their projects, are put under increasing pressure and stress in order to take better care of their laboratory animals without receiving compensation or support. In the meantime, almost nobody seems to care to know how many animals were sacrificed to develop the celebrated COVID-19 vaccines. Are we, biomedical researchers, ever going to have a resolution to this ethical tension around us? Are we going to be viewed by future historians as the heroes of science--or as abusers of living creatures? *Anita Guerrini's Experimenting with Humans and Animals: From Aristotle to CRISPR does not answer the question. As the author states in the beginning of her book, her objective is to tell the history of "trial and error, prejudice and leaps of faith, clashing egos and budget battles," to help us evaluate "the value, and the values, of Western science," and to "influence the future." In other words, the purpose of the book is not to make ethical arguments or to appraise a certain aspect of historical development, such as the progress of ethical care for human and animal subjects. It is, rather, to reveal the reality that ethical views and sentiments have changed, collided, merged, and contradicted each other across time and political landscapes. *This text poses questions, implicitly and explicitly, to enable us to address some of the issues and challenges we are facing at present. A first question arises from the history of vivisection (chap. 1). Vivisection refers to experimenting with (mostly dissecting) live animals, and sometimes even humans. This appears for the first time in recorded history back in ancient Greece, meaning it was practiced for two millennia without anesthesia, a discovery not made until the eighteenth century. More strikingly, vivisection was done as part of "edutainment" shows in ancient times. Criticism of the practice was not necessarily about the cruelty but rather about the usefulness of the knowledge obtained from dying or dead animals. The rights or well-being of animals were not much of an issue in the ancient age as human dominion was a firmly held belief. Such an ethical view continued to be dominant until early Modernity (seventeenth-century Europe) when human and animal bodies alike were viewed as machines, and animal experimentation began to be accepted as a cardinal method for biomedical sciences (chap. 2). At that time, ethical concerns on the use of animals did arise, but the concern lay rather in the human virtues of kindness and compassion rather than the rights of animals. *Eighteenth-century Europe slipped into a new stage of biomedical science after Queen Mary II of England died of smallpox, from which experimentation with humans becomes central (chap. 3). Inoculation, adopted from the Eastern world with initial suspicions, was slowly gaining credibility through parents who were unwilling to put their children at the risk of falling ill to smallpox. The validation of its effectiveness eventually came about upon testing with the socially marginalized, including prisoners, orphans, patients, and slaves. Yet criticisms around the "science" of inoculation were not made for using the marginalized as test subjects but rather for superseding God's authority to cause one to be ill or healed. While an increasing number of animal experiments were conducted routinely, and mathematical descriptions of the body became of greater interest to scientists, the emerging utilitarian ethics began to awaken Europeans, especially the British, to the suffering of animals. While elevated sensitivity to animal suffering led to "antivivisection" movements in England, experimental medicine and physiology were established as scientific fields. During this period nation-states also began to be involved in science. This was also the time when anesthesia was discovered, and pain perception became an important topic in physiology. Eventually, common beliefs about racial or sexual differences in pain perception were also tested, by experimenting with women and black slaves. *In the late nineteenth century, animal experimentation made a strong comeback as the germ theory of disease was solidly validated by scientists such as Pasteur, Koch, and Ehrlich (chap. 5). As scientists began to conquer many diseases such as anthrax, rabies, syphilis, and tuberculosis, the victory of science quenched the antivivisectionist movement. A number of animals, including rabbits, guinea pigs, dogs, and monkeys, were used to test theories, vaccines, and drugs during this period. At the same time, human experimentation begins to be regulated by states, but the regulation was so elementary that practices were allowed that would not be tolerated in our time. Concerns with animal experimentation reemerged in the twentieth century when polio research, strongly advocated by Franklin Roosevelt, a victim of polio himself, claimed a striking number of rhesus monkey lives (chap. 6). As an example, in the 1950s, the United States imported from India 200,000 rhesus monkeys per year for polio research. Despite the polio vaccine's success, primate research appalled the public, especially when behavioral research on primates revealed the emotional depth and social intelligence of these animals. Animals came to be seen no longer just as machines, but as our cousins who, like us, have consciousness. *The last chapter begins by depicting the Nuremberg War Crimes Tribunal of 1946, which led to the first written set of guidelines for human experimentation. Up until this time, there had been little consensus or regulation in using humans for experiments, let alone with the requirement that they must be mentally competent, uncoerced, and fully aware of possible consequences. It is hence not surprising that scientists under the Nazis defended themselves against charges of abuse and euthanasia of human subjects by paralleling their conduct with the practices of contemporary American scientists. American practice was exemplified by the Tuskegee Study of Untreated Syphilis in the Negro Male, conducted from the 1930s to the 1970s, in which the United States Public Health Service left four hundred black syphilis-infected males untreated, without telling them that their treatment had been stopped, in order to study the natural development of untreated syphilis. More than one hundred died as a result. Inconsistency in research ethics can also be found in the case of Japanese scientists, who, in contrast to Germans, were pardoned for their research conduct during World War II in return for providing information to the United States. Nonetheless, through the twentieth century until today, the level of public awareness and national regulations on the use of animal and human subjects has been progressively elevated. Yet, accelerated advances in research technology, including the latest breakthrough of gene editing, and expansion of research fields, continue to add complexity to ethical discourses. *I was impressed by Guerrini's vast knowledge of the historical development of biomedical science, including the events that matter to ethical issues around use of animal and human subjects in research. At the same time, she manages to make the book concise. While the book concerns the ethics of animal and human experimentation, it is certainly not an ethics or philosophy book but rather a story book. That is, while the book raises ethical questions in an unbiased manner, the chronological organization of this story does not conveniently lend itself to efforts to systematically examine or establish ethical principles on these matters. Nonetheless, a deeper understanding of the historical background to the different perspectives encountered in these stories enables one to make more-informed assessments of present-day perspectives. The book can be particularly helpful for those who do not have a biomedical background but wish to engage in contemporary ethical discourses, as well as for those who have rarely thought about the issues at all, often under the assumption that science has justly treated human or animal subjects. Finally, reading these accounts from ancient to contemporary times will certainly help one realize that what is the norm today was not necessarily the norm in the past, nor will it be in the future. Therefore, scientists like me need to humbly accept that we will someday be judged; I believe this knowledge will help us use our best conscience in the present. *Reviewed by Kuwook Cha, Postdoctoral researcher in Physiology, McGill University, Montreal, QC H3A 0G4.
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人类和动物实验:从亚里士多德到Crispr,第二版
人类和动物实验:从亚里士多德到CRISPR,安妮塔·格雷尼的第二版。马里兰州巴尔的摩:约翰霍普金斯大学出版社,2022年。8 + 208页。平装书;28.95美元。ISBN: 9781421444055。*自从我开始用活的哺乳动物进行神经生理学研究以来,一直有一个挥之不去的想法:“我的后代会指责我虐待动物吗?就像我们在纳粹统治下虐待科学家一样?”许多神经生理学家受到威胁和攻击,停止了他们的研究,结果,在美国和加拿大的西海岸,很少有神经生理学家使用恒河猴。一些人越来越关注用大鼠进行的研究,老鼠可能是下一个关注的对象。研究人员和学生被要求在预算范围内完成他们的项目,为了更好地照顾他们的实验动物而没有得到补偿或支持,他们承受着越来越大的压力和压力。与此同时,几乎没有人关心为了开发著名的COVID-19疫苗,牺牲了多少动物。作为生物医学研究人员,我们是否有办法解决我们周围的伦理紧张关系?我们会被未来的历史学家视为科学的英雄,还是生物的滥用者?*Anita Guerrini的《人类和动物实验:从亚里士多德到CRISPR》并没有回答这个问题。正如作者在书的开头所说,她的目标是讲述“尝试和错误、偏见和信仰的飞跃、自我冲突和预算之争”的历史,帮助我们评估“西方科学的价值和价值”,并“影响未来”。换句话说,这本书的目的不是进行伦理论证,也不是评价历史发展的某个方面,比如对人类和动物主体的伦理关怀的进展。相反,它揭示了伦理观点和情感在时间和政治环境中相互变化、碰撞、融合和矛盾的现实。*这篇文章含蓄地和明确地提出了问题,使我们能够解决我们目前面临的一些问题和挑战。第一个问题来自活体解剖的历史(第1章)。活体解剖指的是用活体动物(主要是解剖)进行实验,有时甚至是人类。这在古希腊的历史记录中首次出现,这意味着它在没有麻醉的情况下进行了两千年,直到18世纪才发现。更引人注目的是,在古代,活体解剖是“寓教于乐”表演的一部分。对这种做法的批评不一定是关于残忍,而是关于从垂死或死亡的动物身上获得的知识的有用性。在古代,动物的权利或福利并不是什么大问题,因为人类统治是一种坚定的信念。这种伦理观点一直占据主导地位,直到现代早期(17世纪的欧洲),人类和动物的身体都被视为机器,动物实验开始被接受为生物医学科学的主要方法(第2章)。那时,对动物使用的伦理关注确实出现了,但关注的是人类善良和同情的美德,而不是动物的权利。*英国女王玛丽二世死于天花后,18世纪的欧洲进入了生物医学科学的新阶段,人体实验从此成为中心(第3章)。接种最初是带着怀疑从东方世界引进的,但由于父母不愿让孩子冒感染天花的风险,接种逐渐获得了人们的信任。最终在囚犯、孤儿、病人、奴隶等社会边缘人群中验证了其有效性。然而,对接种“科学”的批评并不是针对把边缘化的人作为测试对象,而是针对取代上帝的权威,导致一个人生病或痊愈。随着越来越多的动物实验被常规地进行,科学家对身体的数学描述越来越感兴趣,新兴的功利主义伦理学开始唤醒欧洲人,尤其是英国人,让他们意识到动物的痛苦。当对动物痛苦的敏感性提高导致了英国的“反活体解剖”运动时,实验医学和生理学被确立为科学领域。在这一时期,民族国家也开始参与科学。这也是麻醉被发现的时间,痛觉成为生理学的一个重要课题。最后,通过对妇女和黑人奴隶的实验,也测试了关于种族或性别在疼痛感知方面差异的普遍看法。 *在19世纪后期,随着疾病的细菌理论被巴斯德、科赫和埃利希等科学家确凿地证实(第五章),动物实验强有力地卷土重来。随着科学家开始征服许多疾病,如炭疽、狂犬病、梅毒和结核病,科学的胜利平息了反对活体解剖的运动。在此期间,包括兔子、豚鼠、狗和猴子在内的许多动物被用来测试理论、疫苗和药物。与此同时,各州开始对人体实验进行监管,但这些监管是如此初级,以至于允许了一些在我们这个时代是不被容忍的做法。对动物实验的关注在20世纪重新出现,当时小儿麻痹症研究在富兰克林·罗斯福(Franklin Roosevelt)的大力倡导下,夺走了大量恒河猴的生命(第6章)。例如,在20世纪50年代,美国每年从印度进口20万只恒河猴用于小儿麻痹症研究。尽管脊髓灰质炎疫苗取得了成功,但灵长类动物的研究令公众感到震惊,尤其是当对灵长类动物的行为研究揭示了这些动物的情感深度和社会智力时。动物不再被视为机器,而是我们的表亲,和我们一样,有意识。*最后一章以1946年纽伦堡战争罪法庭开始,该法庭产生了第一套关于人体实验的书面指导方针。在此之前,在使用人类进行实验方面几乎没有共识或规定,更不用说要求他们必须具有智力能力,不受强迫,并充分意识到可能的后果。因此,毫不奇怪,在纳粹统治下的科学家为自己辩护,反对虐待和对人类受试者实施安乐死的指控,他们将自己的行为与当代美国科学家的做法相提并论。从20世纪30年代到70年代进行的塔斯基吉黑人男性未经治疗的梅毒研究就是美国做法的例证,在这项研究中,美国公共卫生服务部门对400名感染梅毒的黑人男性进行了治疗,不告诉他们他们的治疗已经停止,目的是研究未经治疗的梅毒的自然发展。结果有一百多人死亡。研究伦理的不一致性也可以在日本科学家身上找到,与德国科学家不同,日本科学家在二战期间的研究行为得到了赦免,作为向美国提供信息的回报。尽管如此,从二十世纪到今天,公众对动物和人体实验的认识水平和国家法规都在逐步提高。然而,包括基因编辑的最新突破在内的研究技术的加速进步和研究领域的扩大,继续增加了伦理话语的复杂性。*格雷尼对生物医学科学历史发展的渊博知识给我留下了深刻的印象,包括在研究中使用动物和人类受试者时涉及伦理问题的事件。同时,她设法使这本书简明扼要。虽然这本书涉及动物和人类实验的伦理,但它肯定不是一本伦理或哲学书,而是一本故事书。也就是说,虽然这本书以一种不偏不倚的方式提出了伦理问题,但这个故事的时间组织并没有方便地为系统地检查或建立这些问题的伦理原则提供便利。尽管如此,对这些故事中不同观点的历史背景有了更深入的了解,人们就能对当今的观点做出更明智的评估。对于那些没有生物医学背景但希望参与当代伦理讨论的人,以及那些很少考虑这些问题的人来说,这本书特别有帮助,因为他们通常认为科学公正地对待了人类或动物。最后,阅读这些从古到今的叙述,肯定会帮助人们认识到,今天的规范不一定是过去的规范,将来也不会是。因此,像我这样的科学家需要谦卑地接受,我们总有一天会被评判;我相信这些知识将帮助我们在现在使用我们最好的良心。* Kuwook Cha,加拿大麦吉尔大学生理学博士后研究员,蒙特利尔,QC H3A 0G4。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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