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Living with Lab Mice

Living with Lab Mice

7 comments

·April 20, 2025

pimlottc

Beautiful and unexpectedly poignant. I thought this was a lovely description of the “circle of life”:

> First you are young and look for your place in life; then you are strong and work on your projects; then you slow down; and finally you become part of all there is before you were born.

throwanem

> Through spending time with them, I learned that mice are not the kind of beings that most humans think they are.

The same is true of every animal, I find - not only mice, and certainly including humans.

Jimmc414

You should read the entire article.

the mice weren't "nice" because the trauma and fear from laboratory experiences had conditioned them to be wary of human interaction and have a preference for their own species on top of a lack of understanding from humans what behaviors mice actually find comfortable or meaningful.

Only after prolonged, patient interaction, especially with the last mouse, Spokie, did the author experience genuine, reciprocal communication and bonding

throwanem

I did not need to read the article to know something about how laboratory animals behave. As a child I regularly had the company of controls whom my mother opted to smuggle home once their experiments had concluded - rather than, as was officially required in the laboratory technician role from which she has long since retired, euthanize them.

I suppose if the method required for same were not precisely enough specified, we might argue that "safely and peacefully lived out their allotted span of days" still qualifies as the eponymous or nominal "good death." Mama will be 71 this year but has not lost her wits. Would you like me to text and ask if she remembers whether she broke that rule or only bent it?

I certainly will read the article properly, of course. I just haven't yet made the time. But I will note, since you bring it up, that the implicit distinction given there between behaviorist and ethologist as two different kinds of bad is indeed just the sort of distinction a philosopher might draw; that is, valid, nuanced, interesting, and not at all guaranteed to be remotely sound. The prototypical modern ethologist is Jane Goodall, and the one whose work I've myself most closely and productively studied is Mary Jane West-Eberhard.

addicted

Fortunately we’ve stopped torturing humans for research and exploring them for their skin, labor and flesh.

Hopefully we can find ways to extend that humanity to the other sentient creatures we currently exploit in the hundreds of billions a year.

throwanem

"Exploiting," rather than "exploring," I think perhaps, and to the extent you did not mean that first line as a sarcasm, I would say we have made much albeit faltering progress in recent years. Beyond that I agree with you wholeheartedly.

zabzonk

I recommend gerbils - they don't piss all over the place.