Creepiest Experiments Conducted In The Name Of Science

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jason73

Auslander Raus
First 100
Jan 15, 2015
74,140
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Scientists routinely conduct experiments to check whether their speculations are right or not. Be that as it may, a few scientists have taken this to the extremes. For now, we’ve put on perspective eight of the most bizarre, freakiest, and utmost scariest experiments made for the sake of science.





The Vomit Drinker
In 1804, American doctor Stubbins Ffirth firmly believed that the deadly yellow fever was not infectious. In order to prove that he was right, he performed some revolting experiments to test his idea. He would take some black vomit, saliva and blood from actual yellow fever patients and put them into inflicted wounds in his arms. The creepiest and most disgusting thing that he did was drinking the bloody black vomit and rubbing some of the vomit into his eyes. He considered his case proven when he didn’t get infected.

But, how is this disease really transmitted? Mosquitoes.





Drugged Spiders
Spiders intuitively weave flawless networks of webs to catch their prey. This impressed German researcher Peter Witt. And, in 1948, due to some tinkering around with drugs, he found that offering medications to these creepy crawlies made them weave abnormal webs. He then spent his ENTIRE lifetime indicating how distinctive medications modified the design of a spider’s web. Now, that’s dedication.





The Space Experiment
How would you test what happens to the body amid a long space venture without really going into space? In 1986, specialists in Moscow, Russia, recreated the weightless states of space by keeping 11 male volunteers lying on their backs for 370 days. In spite of some exercises performed on their backs, the outcomes indicated contracted muscles, lighter bones, and appalling weariness and anxiety.





The Living Dead
Breathing life back into the dead was the objective of American scientist and child prodigy Robert Cornish. In 1934, he ressurected a dead canine named Lazarus utilizing medications and a sort of teeter board to get the blood circulating. Because of his success, he requested that he attempt the method on a death-row inmate but his request was denied by California Law Enforcement because of concerns that a reanimated murderer would have to be freed under the “double jeopardy” clause.





The Autojector
Sergei Brukhonenko was a Soviet physician who experimented and developed a primitive heart-lung machine which he called an “autojector”. With this crazy device he succeeded in keeping the severed head of a poor dog alive. In 1928, one of his living dog heads was displayed in front of an international audience of scientists. Brukhonenko proved that the head was alive by banged a hammer on the table (wherein the head flinched), shining light in its eyes (the eyes blinked) and feeding the head a piece of cheese.





Real Beheading Experiments
In 1924, American psychologist Carney Landis felt the urge to know if individuals produced the same facial expressions under the same emotions like shock, distress, sadness and happiness. He took photos of volunteers as they were presented to different encounters, including requesting that they behead a live rodent! 2/3 of the volunteers beheaded the rats themselves. For those who couldn’t behead the rats, Landis did that for them instead. He found out that there was no universal expression for each emotion.





Obedience Test
In 1963, American analyst Stanley Milgram conducted a controversial obedience test experiment. He tested if that individuals would complete atrocious acts if requested to by a power figure or a person with authority. An amazing 65 percent of members gave in and performed what they believed were deadly electric stuns to a concealed person in another room.


Testicle Transplant Experiments
Dr. Leo Stanley was the chief physician of San Quentin prison from 1913 to 1951. He believed that male criminals had low levels of testosterone and that raising testosterone levels in inmates would greatly decrease criminal behavior. This prompted him to conduct crazy testicular experiments wherein he surgically transplanted the testicles of newly executed criminals into live prisoners. However, there was a lack of testicles for his experiments since only 3 executions in one year took place. This lead Quentin to use different animal testicles that he would liquify and inject into the prisoners’ skin.





The Stargate Project
Believe it or not, the US Army was interested in psychic phenomena and tried to find out if they could use this to their own advantage. Thus, the Stargate project was born – a research project involving remote viewing or the ability to see from a distance through psychic means. After about 20 years of zero useful information gathered, the $20 Million project was eventually shut down.





Vaginal Surgery Without Anesthesia
In the 1840’s, J. Marion Sims conducted an extensive surgical study on several female African-American slaves. This study, which spanned 3 years focused on finding a surgical cure for vesicovaginal fistula, a condition that abnormally connects the bladder to the vagina. But here’s the shocking part – he performed the surgeries without anesthesia! A woman named Anarcha, one of Sims’ subjects, endured a staggering 30 operations without anesthesia before he finally got it right.





Two Headed Dogs
In 1954, Vladimir Demikhov created something that the world hasn’t ever seen before – a two-headed dog. He did this by grafting the head, shoulders, and front legs of a puppy onto the neck of an adult German shepherd. When he paraded his creations, he let them simultaneously drink milk. Milk drank by the puppy would drip down the unconnected stump of its esophageal tube much to the dread of the people watching.
 

SongExotic2

ATM 3 CHAMPION OF THE WORLD. #ASSBLOODS
First 100
Jan 16, 2015
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Hmmmm. Scientist wouldn't have been a bad job a few years back.

What are you gonna do this year?

I dunno, probably chop a puppy's head off and stick it on a dog to see what it does.

Oh okay sounds good.




We'll the dog died, so I'm gonna make it into a zombie and then drink some yellow fever puke and chop some pussy up.

Sounds good boss
 

Sweets

All Around Dumbass
Feb 9, 2015
8,797
10,047
Honorable mention for the well of despair experiment by Harry Harlow.

Long story short... Put baby monkey in a steel box, with no top, alone and watch to see how long it takes to completely disintegrate psychologically. It's the most horrific thing done in the name of science in my opinion... I'm sad and enraged just thinking about it. His second and other members of the team refused to take part saying the knowledge benefit was not worth perpetrating that on the animals.

Here's the wiki if anyone wants it.

Pit of despair - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

Darqnezz

Merkin' fools since pre-school
Apr 25, 2015
4,653
7,211
The Tuskegee syphilis experiment: was an infamous clinical study conducted between 1932 and 1972 by the U.S. Public Health Service to study the natural progression of untreated syphilis in rural African-American men in Alabama. They were told that they were receiving free health care from the U.S. government. The victims of the study included numerous men who died of syphilis, 40 wives who contracted the disease, and 19 children born with congenital syphilis.
 

ThatOneDude

Commander in @Chief, Dick Army
First 100
Jan 14, 2015
35,390
34,112
The Tuskegee syphilis experiment: was an infamous clinical study conducted between 1932 and 1972 by the U.S. Public Health Service to study the natural progression of untreated syphilis in rural African-American men in Alabama. They were told that they were receiving free health care from the U.S. government. The victims of the study included numerous men who died of syphilis, 40 wives who contracted the disease, and 19 children born with congenital syphilis.
And people wonder why Republicans don't want government run free health care. Look at shit like this and the VA.
 

SongExotic2

ATM 3 CHAMPION OF THE WORLD. #ASSBLOODS
First 100
Jan 16, 2015
41,694
53,955
Honorable mention for the well of despair experiment by Harry Harlow.

Long story short... Put baby monkey in a steel box, with no top, alone and watch to see how long it takes to completely disintegrate psychologically. It's the most horrific thing done in the name of science in my opinion... I'm sad and enraged just thinking about it. His second and other members of the team refused to take part saying the knowledge benefit was not worth perpetrating that on the animals.

Here's the wiki if anyone wants it.

Pit of despair - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Thats fucked up. Along with a lot of these experiment. You don't need to do fucked up stuff to conclude it does nothing good