Eduard Wirths Essays

  • Who Is Dr. Perl's Out Of Death, A Zest For Life?

    1358 Words  | 3 Pages

                                        Bad Science      On Monday, November 15th, 1982 the New York Times published an article entitled “Out of Death, a Zest for Life.” The title caught my eye because it seemed to be the only one that didn’t have to do with politics, the economy, or terrorism. The author

  • Nazi Medical Experiments

    919 Words  | 2 Pages

    During the holocaust the Nazis conducted medical experiments on what they thought were inferior individuals. The experiments were cruel and had no regard for the quality of life of the subjects. Regardless of the cruelty the medical community gained knowledge that they would not have been able to gain within the strict ethical guidelines of the profession. The experiments are divided into three categories: racial, war related, and pharmaceutical. The race experiments were the worst of all of the

  • Nazi Medical Experiments: Useful but Unethical

    672 Words  | 2 Pages

    During World War II, Hitler rounded up people who were not part of the Aryan Race and sent them to concentration camps; in those camps, some of those people served as test subjects for medical experimentation. These experiments separate into three categories. The first type were “experiments aimed at facilitating the survival of Axis military personnel,” (Museum). Next, the “experimentation aimed at developing and testing pharmaceuticals and treatment methods for injuries and illnesses which German

  • Pez

    1501 Words  | 4 Pages

    Pez was invented in 1927 in Vienna, Austria by an already accomplished candyman named Edward Haas III. The word "Pez" comes from the German word for peppermint, which is phefferminz. You take the first, middle, and last letters, put them together and you get Pez.      When Edward Haas first invented Pez it was originally a breath mint for adult smokers, thus the first dispenser which came along in 1947, naturally, looked like a cigarette lighter. In 1952 Edward Haas brought his business to America

  • 2001: A Space Odyssey

    970 Words  | 2 Pages

    The genius in not the music used in "2001: A Space Odyssey", but what Kubrick does with that music. He reduces each musical score to its essence, and leaves it playing long enough for us to contemplate it, to listen and watch as the movie progresses, which is mostly silent; this technique helps it inhabit it in our imaginations. Among science-fiction movies, perhaps “2001" is the only movie in which the director, in this case Kubrick, is not concerned with thrilling us with his music choice, but

  • The Museum Experience

    1809 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Museum Experience One of my favorite things to do when traveling in a new city is to visit the museums. I have never been to a city that did not offer the usual museum fare, usually in the form of the “Anytown Art Museum”, or the “Anytown Museum of Natural History”. While these types of museums house some incredible artifacts, and I do visit them often, I also like to seek out museums of a more unusual sort. Museums are mostly the same just about everywhere you go, both in the United

  • Josef Mengele Accomplishments

    1208 Words  | 3 Pages

    Dr. Josef Mengele was a Nazi SS officer and physician in Auschwitz concentration camp. He is known infamously as the “Angel of Death” due to his gruesome experiments and doings at Auschwitz concentration camp. There, he performed experiments on people of all kinds to try to find the secret of DNA modification. Most of these experiments were for his own research, but the doctor also did some work for the leader of the Nazi party, Adolf Hitler. Mengele tried to find the solution to perfecting people

  • Biography of Josef Mengele

    1257 Words  | 3 Pages

    Born as the eldest son, March 16, 1911, in Gunzburg, Germany was Josef Mengele. His father was a very wealthy business owner of a manufacturing company of farming equipment. Josef grew up with a strict catholic religion. Later being accepted the University of Munich and obtaining a degree in philosophy. He then pursued a medical degree from the University of Frankfurt am Main, concentrating on physical anthropology and genetics (Killer File). “In January of 1937, at the Institute for Hereditary

  • Mengele's Twin Experiments

    1240 Words  | 3 Pages

    Science is a powerful tool in our society, used to answer the most complex of questions. In some cases, though, science is abused and used as a façade for someone’s own personal gain. This was the case for Josef Mengele and the twin experiments he was in charge of at Auschwitz from 1943-1945. The experiments that were performed by Doctor Mengele went beyond what was requested of him by the German government, and were performed to answer his own personal inquiries.     Is it important to first

  • Nazi Human Experiments

    1346 Words  | 3 Pages

    the soviets and even America. Some of these experiments that were tested on these people were very disgusting and extremely cruel. The Nazis performed some of the most horrific experiments of anyone. The Auschwitz under the direction of Dr. Eduard wirths had inmates selected to certain experiments which were designed to help the Germans. The Nazis performed an experiment on twins in the camp to see if the eugenics and genetics affected their mood and or their attitude. The leader of this experiment