Is My Second Life a Healing Life? - Ch. 24 - Light in the Darkness (4)

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i guessed correctly, so my guess to what happened is, he started to be more reckless with his patients in order to find a cure for him, so he was hated by even his family, and in the end he sided with the cultists to find the cure, that made him end up as a traitor.
 
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Holy shit. Not only is Edgar an OP medical professional (beyond what simply being a "doctor" would entail), but he's also an absolute stan for his nephew. Note: Not to disregard the sacrifices that he made in the name of medicine, but the history of medicine IRL isn't much better (might actually be worse overall).
And the title of the chapter, "A Light in the Darkness" makes even more sense now. Eugene has a way of bringing a particular type of Abyss worshiper to his side, existing as a light in the darkness they perceive the world as.
 

N2O

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Gah, that made me tear up a bit. He's kinda like a post-insanity Itachi? I'm weak :qq:
 
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Yep, can't read this, MC decided to save THE FUCKING GUY THAT WAS TRYING TO KILL HIM, WHEN IT WAS HAPPENING.
One thing is doing it later when the attempt passed and the MC knows the reason, but not when is happening.
 
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But since people think the art makes it gay they don't read it lol
That was actually the reason I gave it a chance despite so many negative comments on this. I was like the cover looks hot and it's pretty rare for guys to be drawn like that so might as well give it a chance. And I don't regret it for a second, the plot is fantastic and gripping, while the cast is all so lovely and cool even the villains.
 
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Holy shit. Not only is Edgar an OP medical professional (beyond what simply being a "doctor" would entail), but he's also an absolute stan for his nephew. Note: Not to disregard the sacrifices that he made in the name of medicine, but the history of medicine IRL isn't much better (might actually be worse overall).
And the title of the chapter, "A Light in the Darkness" makes even more sense now. Eugene has a way of bringing a particular type of Abyss worshiper to his side, existing as a light in the darkness they perceive the world as.
They didn’t really experiment on humans. They just had terrible practices. But animals is a different story. Like insulin
 
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They didn’t really experiment on humans. They just had terrible practices. But animals is a different story. Like insulin
Oh no, dude. There's plenty of actual human experimentation in the history of science and medicine. Nazi Germany, Unit 731 (the group that figured out exactly what percentage of the human body consisted of water)... I'm sure there are a number of other instances as well, where some of the results of horrible human experimentation actually proved fairly useful.
Absolutely horrific experiments, but whether they succeeded or failed, a good number of them did contribute to the modern medical knowledgebase (I don't condone them at all, but I will acknowledge them).
 
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Oh no, dude. There's plenty of actual human experimentation in the history of science and medicine. Nazi Germany, Unit 731 (the group that figured out exactly what percentage of the human body consisted of water)... I'm sure there are a number of other instances as well, where some of the results of horrible human experimentation actually proved fairly useful.
Absolutely horrific experiments, but whether they succeeded or failed, a good number of them did contribute to the modern medical knowledgebase (I don't condone them at all, but I will acknowledge them).
Those are just torture. We didn’t really learn much from them. Percentage of water in human body didn’t really contribute to modern medicine for example.
 
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Those are just torture. We didn’t really learn much from them. Percentage of water in human body didn’t really contribute to modern medicine for example.
It's still knowledge. It provides the basis for other things. Even disproving things helps.
 

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