[This is my no-more-than-2000-word paper for my professional ethics class back in March 2009]
For tens of thousands of years since Homo Sapiens started to roam the earth, especially in the last ice age that coincided with the starting point of making and using tools by humans in late Paleolithic, people have been utilizing their exponentially increasing intelligence to gain advantages from their physical environments and biological surroundings.[1] They have been doing so over the course of many millennia, first merely for their survival. For example, people in the past used animal’s bones to make weapons for hunting and wrapped their bodies with animal skins to keep themselves warm enough to stay alive and to be able to walk around finding food.[2] However, while people keep getting more and more developed, as a rule of thumb, they become even more demanding. They expand their purpose of using animal way beyond a subsistence level, aiming to improve the quality of their everyday lives by ironically attempting to achieve the ever-increasing desire of physical convenience and safety and psychological satisfaction. This may very well explain why the use of animals that involves killing their lives, as time goes by, is becoming more common and more abundant, ranging from a relatively more heated discussed toxicological pre-marketing product testing to manufacturing a trendy Lacoste leather clutch bag.
People’s demands for ever-escalating modish lifestyle and especially health safety have helped stimulate the use of animals in commercial products and product testing, respectively. Animal skins—most commonly seen to be that of crocodiles—are used to manufacture a wide range of clothing products such as bags, purses, wallets, shoes, shirts, belts, hats, and the like. Coats, in particular, are made out of furs from various animals including beavers, foxes, goats, kangaroos, jaguars, leopards, lynxes, rabbits, sheep, skunks, raccoons, otters, and so on.[3] It is estimated that around 40 million animals every single years—over three fourth of them are from farms, and the rest are from the wild—are killed for their furs. Those fur products shovel 11.2 billion dollars, at least, for fur industry across the world each year.[4] Animals are also specially used to make decorative products and souvenirs. Elephants’ tusks and buffalos’, moose’s, dears’ and rams’ horns are proudly used in interior decorations. Plus, plenty types of shells of all sizes are made into pendants, necklaces, bracelets, and even rings. Furthermore, before marketing some particular products that can possibly cause physical irritation and harm to human, scientists conduct many painstaking tests repeatedly of the products on numerous types of animals such as rats, mice, guinea pigs, hamsters, dogs, cats, sheep, cows, pigs, birds, fish, frogs, and monkeys to find out whether there is a desired effect and an unwanted side effect. [5] According to Nature Magazine, in the three- or four-year time for each and every single chemical substance to be tested for toxicological purpose, an unimaginably huge amount of animals, from 5,000 to 12,000, are experimented without using anesthesia whatsoever.[6] In the testing process, healthy animals are deliberately injected with diseases or exposed to chemical constituents. For examples, in cosmetic testing process, rabbits’ eyes are sprayed with perfumes to check if there are signs of injure and irritation, and sunscreens tests are done on guinea pigs. These tests, as the Humane Society of the
[1] Potts, Richard B., 2008. Human Evolution [DVD]. Microsoft® Student 2009.
[2] Thomas, Pauline W., 2008. Early Costume History [online]. Fashion Era. Available from: http://www.fashion-era.com/ancient_costume/early-clothing-celtic-dress.htm#Early_Costume_History [Accessed 13 March 2009].
[3] Gillespie, Karen R., 2008. Fur Industry [DVD]. Microsoft® Student 2009.
[4] Firth, L., 2009. Key facts . The Animal Rights Debate [online], 169. Available from: http://www.independence.co.uk/shop/science-and-health/issues/the-animal-rights-debate
[5] Ibid., West, L., 2009. How to Find Products Not Tested On Animals: Boycotting Animal Testing and Buying Cruelty-Free Products Save Animal Lives [online]. Available from: http://environment.about.com/od/greenlivingdesign/a/animal_testing.htm & N/A, 2009. Animal Experimentation: The facts [online]. British Broadcasting Corporation. Available from: http://www.bbc.co.uk/ethics/animals/using/facts.shtml
[6] N/A, 2009. Animal Testing [online]. Wikipedia. Available from: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal_ testing
[7] Ibid.
[8] Jeantheau, M., 2004. Animal testing: Cosmetics, Personal Care Products, and More [online]. Grinning Planet. Available from: http://www.grinningplanet.com/2004/10-12/cosmetics-animal-testing-article.htm
[9] N/A, 2009. Cosmetic Animal Testing: Cosmetic Industry [online]. ClearLead Incorporation. Available from: http://www.clearleadinc.com/site/cosmetic-animal.html
[10] Ibid.
[11] N/A, 2009. Animal Experimentation: The Facts [online]. British Broadcasting Corporation. Available from: http://www.bbc.co.uk/ethics/animals/using/facts.shtml
[12] Firth, L., 2009. Key facts . The Animal Rights Debate [online], 169. Available from: http://www.independence.co.uk/shop/science-and-health/issues/the-animal-rights-debate
[13] N/A, 2009. The Cast Against Animal Rights [online]. British Broadcasting Corporation. Available from: http://www.bbc.co.uk/ethics/animals/rights/rights_3.shtml
[14] Wood, E. Ethical Considerations in the Use of Laboratory Animals for Research and Teaching at the
[15] N/A, 2009. The Cast against Animal Rights [online]. British Broadcasting Corporation. Available from: http://www.bbc.co.uk/ethics/animals/rights/rights_3.shtml
[16] Wood, E. Ethical Considerations in the Use of Laboratory Animals for Research and Teaching at the
[19] N/A, 2009. The Cast for Animal Rights [online]. British Broadcasting Corporation. Available from: http://www.bbc.co.uk/ethics/animals/rights/rights_2.shtml
[20] N/A, 2009. Introduction to Animal Rights [online]. British Broadcasting Corporation. Available from: http://www.bbc.co.uk/ethics/animals/rights.shtml
[21]
No comments:
Post a Comment