Belinda wrote: ↑April 17th, 2024, 2:18 pm
Sushan wrote: ↑April 16th, 2024, 6:17 am
Belinda wrote: ↑April 13th, 2024, 6:29 am
To ease public distrust in experiments on animals ,all laboratories where they use live animals , kennels and cages, their observance of proper euthanasia and analgesia , must be open to unannounced ,and secret , inspections by PETA and Advocates for Animals and other independent reputable bodies. All animals must be euthanised without fail immediately after the first experiment they undergo.
There must be no exporting of animal laboratory businesses overseas where these strict laws don't apply.
The aim of the experiment must be therapy or education---never a commercial aim.
Tissue cultures must be used as much as possible and animal laboratories must not be allocated tax and investment advantages over tissue culture laboratories.
Animal breeders where experimental animals are bred and reared must likewise be inspected, and no experimental animal must be transported overseas or for more than a mile away from the laboratory. The public must be encouraged under expert supervision to visit the animals , photograph them, keep them company , and pet them as appropriate.
The British public's general attitude to animals is entrenched in the popular culture and words alone will not suffice to communicate and address these concerns, nor should they.
The conversation may seem to have turned away from the original question of the Garden of Eden. The justification for the turn is that man no longer is a child of nature as in Eden, but now that man is exiled from Eden he himself has to shoulder the role of God.
Your suggestions for enhancing transparency and ethical practices in animal research are compelling and crucial for advancing public trust. I think your approach could serve as a robust framework for maintaining the delicate balance between scientific advancement and ethical responsibility.
One aspect that particularly stands out is the idea of engaging the public more directly with the research process. This could indeed transform public perception, making the research process less opaque and more a part of a communal ethical oversight. However, the feasibility of such regular, open access might raise logistical and biosecurity concerns that would need careful management.
Moreover, while the idea of limiting animal transport and ensuring stringent euthanasia protocols are morally sound, they might also impose significant operational challenges that could affect the pace and cost of research. These are not insurmountable, but they would require thoughtful implementation to ensure that they support both the welfare of animals and the scientific integrity of the research.
Your vision of a more ethically conscious research environment aligns with a broader societal move towards greater accountability in science, especially in fields involving genetic and neurological exploration like Neuralink. It’s a vision that rightly demands rigorous scrutiny not just of the scientific methods but also of the moral foundations upon which such research is built.
What do you think are the main hurdles in implementing these policies more widely? How can we balance these necessary ethical considerations with the need to foster innovation in medical research?
I am sorry to not have any compromise to offer but I am so appalled by present vivisection practices that I can't compromise.
As for Neuralink, do you think that it's ethically sound for people to offer themselves as guinea pigs ? Already we use human guinea pigs to research the common cold .Or is Neuralink such that human guinea pigs' freedoms would be at risk , so that there is a difference in kind, not a difference in degree, between using human guinea pigs for the common cold on one hand, and using human guinea pigs for Neuralink research on the other? How could scientists be entrusted with such potential for political power? I suspect it's a difference in kind, and I am trying to think of some precedent. Can you think of a precedent for a civilised society disallowing brainmind control?
I understand a patient with Parkinson's disease or something similar was treated successfully with a Neuralink device. Presumably this was with the patient's informed consent.
Death is irreversible in common practice and so there is a comparison between the choice to die (doctor assisted dying) and the choice to potentially compromise one's freedom with a therapeutic Neuralink device.
Lobectomy took away patients' freedom, and is now rightly condemned, whether or not the patient had consented before the surgery. If there is anything that defines human nature it's freedom together with its obverse, responsibility.
I say "brainmind" because this is occasion to apply the Spinoza ontology of dual aspect monism.
Thank you for the insightful ideas.
When it comes to medicine, both clinical and research, ethics should be strictly adhered to regardless of the situation's severity or value. Whether it's research on the common cold or brain-related issues, ethics should carry the same weight. However, in phase IV drug research, the entire population may be subjected to research, often without explicit consent. If a patient provides fully informed consent for a procedure, it can be argued that it is the individual's right and an exercise of their free will. However, certain practices, such as euthanasia, may not be allowed in some regions despite informed consent due to various legal and ethical reasons. These situations invite complex discussions and are challenging to resolve definitively.
Regarding the question, "How could scientists be entrusted with such potential for political power?" my understanding, influenced by the movie "Oppenheimer," suggests that it is not the scientists who ultimately make these decisions but rather the politicians. From what I've observed, politicians often cannot be trusted, making it risky to entrust scientists with significant power in a world driven by capitalism and moral ambiguity.
Reflecting on Spinoza's theory of dual aspect monism, or "double aspect theory," in the context of medical conditions affecting brain function and projects like Neuralink, I see these conditions as disruptions in the natural connection between mind (the mental) and body (the physical). Elon Musk's work could potentially restore or facilitate this connection.
Your concerns about the ethical implications of using humans in high-stakes medical research are valid and echo widespread reservations. History shows us, such as in the CIA's MKULTRA program during the 1950s and 1960s, where mind control experiments conducted without consent caused significant harm. These instances highlight the need for stringent ethical standards in research, especially involving brain-computer interfaces. (
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog ... xperiments)
In response to your query about a civilized society disallowing brainmind control, while no specific prohibitions may explicitly ban such practices, the foundational principles of medical and research ethics—non-maleficence, beneficence, and autonomy—should theoretically prevent such abuses by ensuring research does not harm participants, potentially benefits them, and respects their autonomy. (
https://www.technologyreview.com/2016/1 ... d-control/)
What do you think? How do you think we can enhance these ethical safeguards to better protect individuals in such advanced research fields?