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Още едно доказателство, че не съществува такова нещо като „по-ниско животно“ и че почти всичко, което има съзнание, изпитва болка по същия начин като нас. И все пак, въпреки напредъка в разбирането ни за това колко сме сходни с всички останали живи същества, все още има хирурзи, които оперират бебета без упойка, както и изследвания за вивисекция върху живи животни като жаби и риби с оправданието, че те не усещат болка като нас, защото не са „достатъчно развити“. Сякаш усещането за болка изисква някаква степен на интелигентност. Ако това е така, то предвид ниския интелект на много лекари, които изказват подобни твърдения, може би те биха се съгласили да се подложат на операция без анестезия, а писъците им да бъдат отхвърлени като „обикновен рефлекс на вредни дразнители“, което е обяснението, давано по отношение на бебетата, жабите, рибите и т.н., които се гърчат от болка, когато са подложени на това варварско лечение.

https://www.thesun.co.uk/tech/9984380/fish-feel-pain-humans-starve-hyperventilate

“…The existence of pain in mammals is a long-known fact, and helped give rise to veganism and vegetarianism. But many diets exclude meat but include fish, often due to a lack of evidence over whether fish feel pain. Now a study claims that fish do feel pain in similar ways to mammals – including humansFish given an electric shock in one part of the tank stopped feeding there, researchers from the University of Liverpool reported in the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B journal. The fish would refuse to feed for three days, effectively starving themselves. Another type of fish called a perch would not feed as frequently after its mouth had been damaged by a fishing hook. This indicates that the fish had been hurt by the injury. Other fish were documented hyperventilating, waving their injury tails and rubbing parts of their body after an injury. Now experts say fish should be treated more humanely. This includes using less damaging hooks to catch fish, and killing fish more quickly after being caught, researchers say. “When subject to a potentially painful event, fishes show adverse changes in behaviour such as suspension of feeding and reduced activity, which are prevented when a pain-relieving drug is provided,” said Dr Lynne Sneddon, of the University of Liverpool. “When the fish’s lips are given a painful stimulus, they rub the mouth against the side of the tank – much like we rub our toe when we stub it.”

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