Monster Essays - Thousands of essays
 
 Members
  Member's Area

 Subjects
  American History
  Arts and Television
  Biographies
  Book Reports
  Creative Writing
  Economics
  Education
  English Papers
  Geography
  Health and Medicine
  Legal Issues
  Miscellaneous
  Music and Musicians
  Poetry and Poets
  Politics
  Religion
  Science and Environment
  Social Issues
  Technology
  World History

Enter your query below to search our database containing over 45,000+ essays and term papers

Search For:

Search results 31 - 40 of 213 matching essays
« Previous Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next »

31: Animal Testing: Testing....1....2...3
Animal Testing: Testing....1....2...3 Author: Tatum Szymczak It is a dark stormy night when suddenly the phone rings. I casually answer the telephone. It is my older sister informing ... is merely a routine brain transplant. They reinforce that very few die from the actual transplant. I become immediately relieved as a huge burden has been lifted off my shoulders. Animal testing is an issue in today's society that, whether anyone realizes it, does affect each of us. Such as transplants, vaccines, and medicine. Nearly each and every one of ... are beginning to become a more and more common every day. Who knows what is possible with the proper research. Today there are a great deal of people who oppose animal testing in laboratory research. This is limiting our medical capabilities . Could we be holding ourselves back from medical breakthroughs such as a cure for cancer or AIDS? Animal testing ...
32: Should Animals be used for Research Testing?
Should Animals be used for Research Testing? Animal rights activists continually attack the study of medical research that evolves animals as test dummies. Too much of the public has come to the conclusion that medical researchers are “torturers rather than healers.” In many cases the good of the research is overlooked and the bad is used. Even though many people may believe that animal research is morally wrong, animal research should continue because it is critical to a continuing progress in human health. There is not yet an available alternate to animal research. ...
33: Plan and Purpose (Creation) or Time and Chance (Evolution)?
... Theory of Use and Disuse Jean Baptiste Lamarck was one of several theorists who proposed an evolutionary theory based on the “use and disuse” of organs. He observed that an animal’s body parts could change during its lifetime, depending on the extent to which it used them. Organs and muscles that were frequently used became larger, stronger, and remained active ... the ones that live longest, and those that live longest are the ones that gather food more efficiently, survive the rigors of the environment, and avoid or deter predators. The animal with longer legs will run faster and thus escape a predator. The animal with thicker fur will survive a cold winter. Other members which have less favorable traits, will be less able to cope with the harsh conditions, and therefore, less likely ...
34: Abuse of the Innocent
... cage with many other animals, not being able to touch the grass, run around and play, smell the flowers, or go for a walk in the warmth of the sunshine? Animal cruelty is wrong because we are hurting the Innocent. Animals experience and feel pain, fear, anxiety, stress, depression, boredom, joy and happiness. Animals are very intelligent, some ever learn our own language. Most people experience their first bond with an animal. Not only do they bring a companion and a friend into our lives, but also unconditional love and comfort. Pet shops and puppy mills mass produce, kennels are overcrowded and ... have been practiced in biology classes for many years. Critics accuse some teachers of killing and argue that disection teaches nothing but cruelty. Nothing is learned by cutting up an animal that cannot be learned from photographs or drawings. Children do not learn about the human body by killing and disecting a person, they learn from diagrams and textbooks. Vivisection ...
35: Animal Farm
Many great works have been inspired by events in history. George Orwell's Animal Farm provides an unusual outlook on the Russian Revolution and its leaders by using animals to represent their human actions. Orwell attacks communist society and points out weaknesses in its government officials. He calls for a close examination of the treatment of Russian citizens and questions whether they have any rights at all. Orwell was careful in his use of animals in Animal Farm. Animal Farm uses the perfect combination of animal symbolism to relate the occurrences on Manor Farm to actual historical events of the Russian Revolution through the use of ...
36: Abuse Of The Innocent
... cage with many other animals, not being able to touch the grass, run around and play, smell the flowers, or go for a walk in the warmth of the sunshine? Animal cruelty is wrong because we are hurting the Innocent. Animals experience and feel pain, fear, anxiety, stress, depression, boredom, joy and happiness. Animals are very intelligent, some ever learn our own language. Most people experience their first bond with an animal. Not only do they bring a companion and a friend into our lives, but also unconditional love and comfort. Pet shops and puppy mills mass produce, kennels are overcrowded and ... have been practiced in biology classes for many years. Critics accuse some teachers of killing and argue that disection teaches nothing but cruelty. Nothing is learned by cutting up an animal that cannot be learned from photographs or drawings. Children do not learn about the human body by killing and disecting a person, they learn from diagrams and textbooks. Vivisection ...
37: The Evolution Of Inequality In
... system in the United States, there has been inequality. The Declaration of Independence declared that "…all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights…"(Jefferson). The reality of the Declaration of Independence was that all free, white, landowning men are created equal. Slavery continued in the U.S. for nearly ninety years after the ... U.S. legal system has strived for and failed to grasp fully. After the establishment of independence in the United States, the development of the Constitution and the Bill of Rights ensued. The Bill of Rights was to establish the basic rights of every citizen of the United States, but failed to do so. The rights of white, male citizens were the only rights that ...
38: Genetic Faltering
... of genetic engineering brings to the world. “In Greek myth, an chimera was a part lion, part goat, part dragon that lived in Lycia; in real life, it’s an animal customized with genes of different species. In reality, it could be a human-animal mixture that could result in horror for the scientific community. In myth the chimera was taken down by the warrior Bellerophon, the biotech version faces platoons of lawyers, bioethicists, and ... 1997, when a group of British scientists cloned Dolly the sheep. The scientists used part of the original animals DNA, and they expanded upon it to where they had the animal’s entire genetic make-up. This procedure shocked the world, in being it was the first known successful cloning. This experiment raised eyebrows, and it upset many people because ...
39: The Decline Of Freedom (animal
The Decline of Freedom on Animal Farm The simple idea of a world with no humans was introduced to the animals by a pig named Old Major. This led to a revolution like no other. The animals of Animal Farm, a book by George Orwell, decide that there has to be something better for them than the life they are living. It is dominated by humans who treat the ... to survive by themselves in a peaceful, democratic way, but one pig named Napoleon enjoys the taste of power and turns it into a dictatorship. Throughout the whole story, the animal s rights, along with their freedom and equality, which they fought so hard to gain begins to disappear. With equal blame on the thirst for power from Napoleon and ...
40: The Debate on Gay Rights
The Debate on Gay Rights The argument on rights, be it human, animal, black, white or gray, is always a difficult one. One should begin by deciding who makes up these rights. Even that in itself would be difficult enough. If a ...


Search results 31 - 40 of 213 matching essays
« Previous Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next »

 

 Copyright © 2003 Monster Essays.com
 All rights reserved
Support | Faq | Forgot Password | Cancel Membership