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ANTIVIVISECTION DISINGENUOUSNESS

JAMA. 1909;LII(5):389-390. doi:10.1001/jama.1909.02540310049009.
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In the report of an inquest1 on a child who died from the results of an injury, after the casual dressing of a wound of the skull at the National Antivivisection Hospital, London, the following illuminating instance of the disingenuousness of antivivisection tactics appears. The coroner, quoting from a prospectus of the hospital, asked what was meant by the expression found there: "No experiments on patients." The witness, resident medical officer at the hospital, replied: "I do not know that any hospital has experiments on patients." The coroner rejoined: "Is it usual in general hospitals to experiment on patients?" To which the representative of antivivisection replied: "No, sir; but other hospitals are equally at liberty to put that." Can the sophistry of this answer be rendered clear to the gentleman in question by a personal application of the principle? If in a discussion he were to assert a certain thing

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