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Henry Jacob Bigelow quotes
The horrors of [Vivisection] have supplanted the solemnity, the thrilling fascination, of the old unetherized operation upon the human sufferer. Their recorded phenomena, stored away by the physiological inquisitor on dusty shelves, are mostly of as little present use to man as the knowledge of a new comet or of a tungstate of zirconium: perhaps to be confuted the next year, perhaps to remain as fixed truth of immediate value, - contemptibly small compared with the price paid for it in agony and torture.
Henry Jacob Bigelow
Anti-cruelty societies should be encouraged. The progress of science has suffered little by their existence, and humanity has gained much.
Henry Jacob Bigelow
There can be no question that the practice of vivisection hardens the sensibility of the operator and begets indifference to the infliction of pain, as well as great carelessness in judging of its severity.
Henry Jacob Bigelow
Watch the students at a vivisection. It is the blood and suffering, not the science, that rivet their breathless attention. If hospital service makes young students less tender of suffering, vivisection deadens their humanity, and begets indifference to it.
Henry Jacob Bigelow
There will come a time when the world will look back to modern vivisection in the name of science as they now do to burning at the stake in the name of religion.
Henry Jacob Bigelow
It should not for a moment be supposed that cultivation of the intellect leads a man to shrink from inflicting pain. Many educated men are no more humane, are in fact far less so, than many comparatively uneducated people.
Henry Jacob Bigelow