P F Tinmore
Diamond Member
- Dec 6, 2009
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Well I'm nowhere near it, so it's a moot point for me, really.
I know they have prior consent, but I'm not sure prior consent means anything when it comes to abuse of a corpse.
Maybe it does. They're dead, I guess, I don't care personally.
Still, it's gross. The "artist" has dedicated his life to carving up people. What a way to live.
Q: Where do the full body specimens come from?
A: The full body specimens are persons who lived in China and died from natural causes. After the bodies were unclaimed at death, pursuant to Chinese law, they were ultimately delivered to a medical school for education and research. Where known, information about the identities, medical histories and causes of death is kept strictly confidential.
Well I'm nowhere near it, so it's a moot point for me, really.
I know they have prior consent, but I'm not sure prior consent means anything when it comes to abuse of a corpse.
Maybe it does. They're dead, I guess, I don't care personally.
Still, it's gross. The "artist" has dedicated his life to carving up people. What a way to live.
a lot about the human body is lost in the process of embalming (IMO).
Yes, but a fresh body ever few days, fully prepared and ready for display, is simply not feasible.