There is one in a mall near my house but it's crazy expensive.how many pesos?
I spent three years around cadavers cut and preserved in all kinds of states where "touching" was a requirement. Will these exhibits still have the same impact on me?
I spent three years around cadavers cut and preserved in all kinds of states where "touching" was a requirement. Will these exhibits still have the same impact on me? Various organs at various stages/ages sounds interesting.
spoiler (click to show/hide)Seriously don't go to these unless you want to the remains of Chinese criminals sold to a large corporation[close]
Bodies from deceased persons who did not give consent – such as deceased hospital patients from Kyrgyzstan and executed prisoners from China – have never been used in a Body Worlds exhibition. In January 2004, the German news magazine Der Spiegel reported that von Hagens had acquired corpses of executed prisoners in China; von Hagens countered that he did not know the origin of the bodies, and returned seven disputed cadavers to China. In 2004, von Hagens obtained an injunction against Der Spiegel for making the claims.
A commission set up by the California Science Center in Los Angeles in 2004 confirmed von Hagens' commitment to ethical practices, and published its Summary of Ethical Review. The commission matched death certificates and body donation forms, and verified informed legal consent of the bodies in the exhibitions. However, to ensure the privacy and anonymity promised to body donors, Von Hagens' Institute for Plastination maintains a firewall between body donors' documentation and finished plastinated bodies. To date, more than 9,000 individuals have pledged to donate their bodies to the Institute for Plastination in Heidelberg, in Germany.