Wednesday, March 2, 2011

10 Cruel World's Top Scientists

10 John Lilly: Creator harpy Tank Sensor
To find out what would happen if the brain is cut off from all external stimuli, scientist John Lilly built the first sensory deficiencies tank in 1954. Floating in warm water for hours in darkness and silence, Lilly began to experience a real fantasy.
"Fantasy is too personal to be submitted to the public," he reported later. Hallucinations of his test subjects are equally difficult to categorize scientifically. This is one reason why his research was not published.
Lilly later gave up on scientific research and began to establish firm Samadhi Tanks, which is produced domestically. In 1980, Lilly's work was the model for the film "Altered States". After becoming a new age teacher, he died in 2001.

9 Kevin Warwick: The First Cyborg 
Kevin Warwick is a British scientist and professor of cybernetics is very fascinated by the robot, he even tried to become the first person ever to become a cyborg.
In 1998, a simple RFID transmitter implanted under his skin Warwick, and is used to control doors, lights, heaters, and other computer-controlled devices based on scientific approach. The main purpose of this experiment he said to test the limits of the body's ability to receive, and how easy it would receive a meaningful signal from the chip.
In 2002, a more complex neural equipment embedded in his nervous system, to gain access to the signal. The experiment proved so successful, until the signal is generated in sufficient detail on the robot arm to mimic the act of Warwick's own arm.
Then, additional experiments in which the most publicized is a simple array implanted into Warwick's wife in order to create a form of telepathy or empathy using fractions lInternet to communicate from a distance was also successful, producing the first purely electronic communication experiment between two human nervous system. His experiments are still continuing to this day.


8. Shiro Ishii: True Doctor Satan 
Ishii was a microbiologist and the lieutenant general of Unit 731, a biological warfare unit of the Japanese Imperial Army during the Sino-Japanese War. He was born in the former Village Sanbu District Shibayama in Chiba Prefecture, and studied medicine at Kyoto Imperial University.
In 1932, he began his preliminary experiments in biological warfare as a secret project of the Japanese military. In 1936, Unit 731 was formed. Ishii built a huge compound - more than 150 buildings over six square kilometers - outside the city of Harbin, China.
Some of the many atrocities committed by Ishii and others under his command in Unit 731 include: vivisection of living people (including a pregnant woman impregnated by the doctors), prisoners with a leg amputated and attached to other parts of their bodies, a number of prisoners made his limbs frozen and thawed to study the outcome of untreated gangrene.
Humans are also used as living test cases for grenades and flame throwers. Prisoners were injected with inoculations of disease, with disguised as vaccinations, to study their effects. To study the effects of venereal disease which there is no cure, prisoners of men and women deliberately infected with syphilis and gonorrhea through rape, then studied.
Once granted immunity by the American Occupation Authorities at the end of the war, Ishii spent his time in prison for his crimes and died at age 67 from esophageal cancer.


7. Andrew Ure: Butcher Scotland   
Andrew Ure, despite many accomplishments as a Scottish doctor, he is more famous for four experiments conducted on Matthew Clydesdale on November 4, 1818.
The first experiment involved an incision in the neck. Part of the vertebra is removed. An incision was then made in the left hip. Then the pieces are made in the heel. Two rods are connected with the batteries placed on the neck and hips, which causes uncontrollable seizures.
The second bar was placed in the heel, where the left leg kicked with such force, that it almost makes collapsed assistant. The second experiment made the diaphragm of Forster's chest up and down, as if he was breathing again.
Ure had reported that during Forster's blood is not drained, or neck is not broken, he believes he can turn it back.
3rd experiment showed extraordinary facial expressions that show when Ure made an incision in Forster's forehead. Rod was inserted, and Forster's face began to show emotions of anger, horror, despair, sorrow, and hideous, contorted smiles.
Expression of fear from the audience was so severe that a doctor fainted on the spot. Experiment end to make people believe that Forster was living. Cuts have also been made in the index. When the rod was inserted, Forster began to raise his hand and pointed to the people in the audience. Needless to say, many viewers are hysterical.


6. Sergei Bruyukhonenko: The Dog Decapitator
Long before Vladimir Demikhov, Bruyukhonenko mad experiments on dogs led to the development of open-heart procedures. He developed a crude machine called autojektor (heart and lung machine).
By using this primitive machine, Bryukhonenko keep some dog's head alive. In 1928, he showed one of the heads in front of an audience.
To prove it was real, he was banging a hammer on the table. Head jerked. When the dog's eyes lit, his eyes blinking. And when fed a piece of cheese, the rest get out of the esophagus, which makes a lot of spectators dazzled but also disgusted and unhappy.


5. Giovanni Aldini: Electricity Experiment on Corpse    
Aldini was the nephew of Luigi Galvani. His uncle invented the concept of galvanism, when experimenting with electrical currents on frog legs. Aldinitry to continue the experiment further . Aldini experimented on dead bodies. In front of an audience, he conducted experiments on prisoners who were hanged, George Forster.
He's applying electrically conductive conductor rod in the rectum, until the prisoner began punching the air, and his legs began to kick and flinch. Stem that applicable to the face makes the body was clenched and trembling. His left eye open.
And few people present feared the corpse back to life, and if true then he must return executed. One man was so frightened spectators, and shortly after leaving the area, he reportedly died.


4. Johann Conrad Dippel: the original Frankenstein  
Johann Conrad Dippel was born and raised in the castle Frankenstein, in 1673 at a place near near Darmstadt, Germany. He is said to be the original form of the novel Mary Shelley's "Frankenstein", even though the idea remains controversial.
After studying theology, philosophy and alchemy, he created an animal oil made from bone, blood and various other animal products, known as the Oil Dippel is expected to be equivalent to mimipi the alchemists of the "elixir of life."
It is said that some part in this work include boil various body parts in large vats to make some kind of crazy potions. Dippel is known as the inventor of synthetic chemicals called Prussian Blue. He claimed to have created the immortal fluid. Reportedly, the experiment was inspired by the character corresponding to the name of the castle where he was born, Franskenstein.



3. Josef Mengele, the Angel of Death  
Joseph Mengele became famous for being one of the SS doctor who oversaw the selection of detainees who came, determining who should be killed and who became slave laborers, and to conduct human experiments on camp prisoners, among people who knew Mengele as "Angel of Death . At Auschwitz, Mengele did a number of studies in twins. Once the experiment is completed, these twins are usually murdered and their bodies dissected. He is overseeing an operation in which two Gypsy children sewn together to create Siamese twins, the hands of the children became very infected where the veins they have been damaged. Mengele very fanatic with the blood of twins, particularly identical twins. He reportedly took their blood to death. Auschwitz prisoner Alex Dekel says: "I never could accept the fact that Mengele himself believed he was doing serious work - not from the way he was less careful about it. He just runs his power. " "Mengele ran a butcher shop - major surgeries performed without anesthesia. Once, I witnessed a stomach operation - Mengele remove the pieces from the stomach, but without anesthesia. At other times, it is issued by the liver, again, without anesthesia. It was horrible. " "Mengele was a doctor who became mad because he was given power. No one ever asked him - why did this one die? Why not that one perish? The patients do not count. He confessed to what he did in the name of science, but it is part of the madness ".


2. Stubbins Ffirth: Yellow Fever Vomit-Drinking Doctor  
During the 1800s, a doctor training in Philadelphia, Stubbins Ffirth, formed the hypothesis that yellow fever was not infectious diseases, and continued his hypothesis by experimenting on himself.
Initially he was infected with blood pouring into the open wound and then try to drink the blood of those infected. He did not fall ill, but this is not due to yellow fever is not contagious, but since then known that the transmission should be via direct injection into the bloodstream, or normally through a mosquito bite.




1. Vladimir Demikhov: Two Headed Transplant Dogs  
In 1954, Soviet surgeon Vladimir Demikhov, revealed to the world's greatest works: A two-headed dog. Puppy's head has been grafted into the neck of an adult German shepherd dogs. The second head will get the rest of the milk, do not even need food because the milk flowing down the neck of sambungna esophagus.
Although eventually both animals soon died because of tissue rejection, it does not stop Demikhov to create more than 19 more two-headed dog for 15 years thereafter.

 

0 comments:

Post a Comment