• Scubus@sh.itjust.works
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    9 months ago

    Well for one, I doubt it was panicking since it was asleep.

    For two, I’d imagine they reconnected the blood vessels and then the pig was perfectly fine aside from scarring.

    Had you read the article, as previously mentioned, you would know point 1 and be able to imply point 2

    • platypus_plumba@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      Where did they say the pig was asleep?

      Where did they say that the pig was fine after the experiment?

      What makes you think those 2 things?

      You’re assuming things that aren’t explicitly stated. For me, even if your conditions are met, the experiment is still disgusting. Would you allow them to do it to you? No? Why not? So why is it acceptable to pull that shit on a other sentient being?

    • WeirdGoesPro@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      9 months ago

      The way the article said they disconnected it after 5 hours, having already shut off all natural blood flow to the brain, and considering that it seems that the brain was completely disconnected from all bodily input as one of the variables of the experiment, I honestly believe all of those pigs died at the end.

      They did not say the pigs were asleep in the article, they said that brain function was seen to be mostly normal. I hope that means that, disconnected from all input, the brain was unable to experience conscious panic, but my spidey sense tells me that probably isn’t the case.

      Horrific experiment that hopefully yields very useful results and doesn’t need to be repeated. With any luck, one of the benefits of AI may be modeling things like this so we don’t have to do it for real.