Whether or not fish feel pain is the subject of debate in the scientific community. Since the answer to this debate is of great importance to us as fish keepers, especially those of us that treat our fish as "wet pets", I decided to share what I know about the academic debate. I have tried to synthesize and paraphrase the arguments below. A great source of information on this issue can be found here:
http://animalstudiesrepository.org/animsent/vol1/iss3/1/
Note that the above link is to a peer-reviewed academic article and the links below it are not references, they are responses/commentaries from other scientists that are not peer-reviewed. This is just a convenient source of information. There are peer-reviewed published articles on both sides of this argument.
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On the “fish do not feel pain” side, the argument goes like this:
1) Pain in humans is associated with the neocortex, fish do not possess a neocortex, therefore fish are incapable of pain
2) Humans are too quick to assume a fish experiences injuries etc. the way a human would.
3) Aversion to a stimulus does not necessarily mean the fish is in pain.
On the “fish do feel pain” side, the argument goes like this:
1) Fish cannot tell us whether or not they are in pain, so we can’t tell if they are or not.
2) The structures of the brain associated with pain may be different in fish and humans.
Lately the debate has shifted to “What should the null hypothesis be”? In other words, what should we assume about fish and pain in the absence of any information on whether fish experience pain the same way we do?
1) Fish do not feel pain.
2) Fish feel pain.
The null hypothesis (Ho) is generally taken to be that there is no difference or relationship between two things. The null hypothesis might also written as the two things being compared are the same, since there is no difference between them. The alternate hypothesis (Ha) is that two things ARE different from one another or that there IS a relationship between two things.
So, which of these sets of hypotheses is correct?
Option 1 (the "fish don't feel pain" camp):
Ho: Fish are incapable of experiencing pain
Ha: Fish are capable of experiencing pain
Option 2 (the "fish do feel pain" camp):
Ho: Fish are capable of experiencing pain
Ha: Fish are incapable of experiencing pain
In other words, in the absence of new information, what is the safer assumption. Fish feel pain or fish do not feel pain?
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Further background reading on this issue can be found here:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pain_in_fish