Every year, over two hundred million innocent animals are injured or killed during animal testing across the world. Of those animals, an estimated 26 million animals are used in the United States alone.(“Animal Testing”) It’s said that an animal dies in a laboratory every few seconds. Those in favor of animal testing say they’re taking animals’ lives to save humans’ lives. But is it really necessary to subject animals to harmful conditions or painful experiments for science? Is it ethically or morally right to destroy and take an animal’s life while simply testing lipstick or shampoo? Animal testing, like many other issues, is difficult to argue against, and even harder to support. Animal testing is an extremely huge controversy today. When …show more content…
Some proponents of animal testing say that it has enabled the development of many life-saving treatments for both humans and animals, that there is no alternative method for researching a complete living organism, and that strict regulations prevent the mistreatment of animals in laboratories.(“Animal Testing”) Some opponents of animal testing say that it is cruel and inhumane to experiment on animals, that alternative methods available to researchers can replace animal testing, and that animals are so different from human beings that research on animals often yields irrelevant results (“Animal Testing”). In my eyes as well as many others, I do not agree with any pros for animal testing. Animal testing is just cruel and has no purpose. Most of the time animals react differently to certain things than humans …show more content…
If I touched the lit end of a cigarette to a rat's nose, would it hurt him any less than if I did it to you? We frequently act as though animals are altogether inferior, ignoring their tremendous complexity and capacity to feel pain. Yet anyone who has lived with a cat or a dog knows that animals feel pain and that they feel it just as agonizingly and as deeply as we do. Moreover, the limbic system in the human brain, which accounts for our emotional range, is prominent in mammalian species. They then experience emotions as intense and authentic as our own. All animal species are unique, particularly at the cellular level where disease occurs. While the central nervous system of many animals is quite similar to our own, their other systems, like their cardiovascular, may differ greatly. The importance of these differences cannot be underestimated since these variations can significantly impact the reliability of any parallels between humans and animals. Therefore, it seems illogical to utilize animals in order to test a hypothesis about humans. Moreover, human disease occurs within the complex structure of the human body where a number of variables interact to cause the resulting disorder. These variables can include genetic and environmental influences, bad habits, and stress. Because many human diseases do not occur naturally in animals,