Have any notes from Nazi Experiments been released to the public for reading? I don't mean books retelling the details, I mean copies of the actual notes taken.
(And no, I don't plan to be making any human centipedes. I simply want to read them for the sake of horror story ideas).
OP gets a sexual thrill from reading nazi notes
There's the wikipedia page;
[url]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazi_human_experimentation[/url]
[QUOTE=TamTamJam;29531750]There's the wikipedia page;
[url]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazi_human_experimentation[/url][/QUOTE]
[QUOTE=Wikipedia]...sewing twins together in attempts to create conjoined twins.[/QUOTE]
What the [B]FUCK[/B]
[QUOTE=Wikipedia]a young boy of eleven or twelve [was] strapped to a chair so he could not move. Above him was a mechanized hammer that every few seconds came down upon his head.[/QUOTE]
What
[QUOTE]injection of different chemicals into the eyes of twins to see whether it would change their color[/QUOTE]
THE
[QUOTE] They were so dehydrated that others observed them licking freshly mopped floors in an attempt to get drinkable water.[/QUOTE]
[H2]FUUUUUUUUCK[/H2]
[QUOTE=Mister Sandman;29532098]What the [B]FUCK[/B]
What
THE
[H2]FUUUUUUUUCK[/H2][/QUOTE]
Yeah, Dr. Mengele was a dick.
[editline]30th April 2011[/editline]
[QUOTE=TamTamJam;29531750]There's the wikipedia page;
[url]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazi_human_experimentation[/url][/QUOTE]
Thanks, but I mean the actual notes/observations written down by the scientists (a term I use loosely). I'm sure someone published them somewhere.
They are gone now...
:colbert:
[QUOTE=PixelC3000;29533614]They are gone now...[/QUOTE]
The original notes probably. But I highly doubt nobody bothered to make copies (true most of it was probably destroyed when the Allies were closing it, but a lot was still found), if for nothing more than court evidence for prosecutions.
Funny how we used most of these notes after the war so that we didn't have to do the same experiments.
There was one experiment where they would put a twin in like a gas chamber and put the other twin in a room, and they tried to see if the twin that is not getting tortured can feel the pain..
harsh
[QUOTE=The mouse;29534216]Funny how we used most of these notes after the war so that we didn't have to do the same experiments.[/QUOTE]
[quote=wikipedia]Contemporary knowledge concerning the manner in which the human body reacts to freezing is based almost exclusively on these Nazi experiments. This, together with the recent use of data from Nazi research into the effects of phosgene gas, has proven controversial and presents an ethical dilemma for modern physicians who do not agree with the methods used to obtain these data. Similarly, controversy has arisen from the use of results of biological warfare testing done by the Imperial Japanese Army's Unit 731. However, the results from Unit 731 were kept classified by the United States and the majority of doctors involved were given pardons.[/quote]
True. Some of it [i]was[/i] valuable data.
Think of the Milgrim's Experiment in the seventies.[QUOTE=Evil Policeman;29530794]Have any notes from Nazi Experiments been released to the public for reading? I don't mean books retelling the details, I mean copies of the actual notes taken.
(And no, I don't plan to be making any human centipedes. I simply want to read them for the sake of horror story ideas).[/QUOTE]
Gah, I want to read some of these but I'd probably shit myself and then never be able to get to sleep. I remember reading about Die Glocke for a good hour or so and then having nightmares about it for the next week.
[QUOTE=BigSmokeDawg;29535360]Gah, I want to read some of these but I'd probably shit myself and then never be able to get to sleep. I remember reading about Die Glocke for a good hour or so and then having nightmares about it for the next week.[/QUOTE]
What's Die Glocke
[QUOTE=Mister Sandman;29532098]What the [B]FUCK[/B]
What
THE
[H2]FUUUUUUUUCK[/H2][/QUOTE]
[quote]From about September 1942 to about December 1943 experiments were conducted at the Ravensbrück concentration camp, for the benefit of the German Armed Forces, to study bone, muscle, and nerve regeneration, and bone transplantation from one person to another. Sections of bones, muscles, and nerves were removed from the subjects without use of anesthesia. As a result of these operations, many victims suffered intense agony, mutilation, and permanent disability.[/quote]
Disturbing.
[QUOTE=ionuttzu;29535382]What's Die Glocke[/QUOTE]
From what I found, it looks like it was a machine that supposedly emitted radiation and if a concave mirror was placed on top of it, you could see images from the past. It's thought to have been an experiment in antigravity, if it ever existed at all.
[QUOTE=Schmaaa;29539185]From what I found, it looks like it was a machine that supposedly emitted radiation and if a concave mirror was placed on top of it, you could see images from the past. It's thought to have been an experiment in antigravity, if it ever existed at all.[/QUOTE]
It was also speculated to be some form of free-energy.
I love learning about this stuff but it's also so creepy and scary to think about.
[QUOTE=Mister Sandman;29532098]What the [B]FUCK[/B]
What
THE
[H2]FUUUUUUUUCK[/H2][/QUOTE]
That's why there's Godwin's law, nothing can compare to the horrible horrible things the Nazis did.
[QUOTE=angelangel;29540856]That's why there's Godwin's law, nothing can compare to the horrible horrible things the Nazis did.[/QUOTE]
I'm sure Stallin did some things right up there with the Nazis. It just isn't nearly as well known.
Together with someone else I had to do some research on this topic for history class. We haven't found any real notes, and basically not to much information in general about his.
What I remember were some air caisson and underwater tests, where they let some people naked in extremely cold water outside in winter, just to see how their bodies behave. They also wanted to test how the human body behaves when he's falling down or going up real fast.
They wanted to test some antidotes for different diseases, so they cut deep wounds into legs of women, often to the bone, and infected them with viruses. They often lost their leg or died.
What I remember the most gruesome were sterilization experiments. They irradiated men's genitals (they often suffered from burning), and after a couple of days they were spayed. For women they injected acid into their uteruses, because they wanted to sterilize a lot of people preferably quick.
The results of all these experiments brought no consolidated findings, because they were either out-dated due to some other findings a couple of years ago (for the antidote experiments), or they were tested in a wrong way. Thousands of people died due to these experiments, and most of the subjects cam from concentration camps like Auschwitz.
[QUOTE=Evil Policeman;29549991]I'm sure Stallin did some things right up there with the Nazis. It just isn't nearly as well known.[/QUOTE]
There's also Unit 731, the Japanese experiments.
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