ALTEX :: Alternatives to Animal Experiments
1995, Volume 1
Ethical Aspects of Animal Experimentation
Tjard de Cock Buning, Robert Heeger and Henk Verhoog
Medical Faculty, University of NL-Leiden
SUMMARY
Animal experimentation has become a fundamental part of scientific procedures in the study of living nature. But with the acknowledgement, that animals possess a value of their own, animal experimentation is no longer regarded as self-evidently justified from an ethical point of view. In addition to having at least to make attempts to find alternatives, researchers will also have to embark upon the question of whether the methods used will be compensated by the results of their research. This requires an ability to engage in an ethical dialogue, which should be conducted by ethics committees. Such ethical reasoning may be required to meet certain standards, both with respect to form and content, in order for researchers to be able to maintain that there are "gold reasons" in the ethical sense to pursue their lines of research. Awareness of fallacies (logical pitfalls in ethical argumentation) is important in this dialogue. Public accessibility provides a safeguard for society against neglect of the acknowledgment that animals possess a value of their own.
Keywords: ethical aspects, animal experimentation, moral relevance of animals, fallacies, pitfalls in ethical argumentation


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