MS does not support multiple versions of IE on one operating system. The reason is that the operating system and IE share certain DLLs. When you upgrade from IE6 to IE7 (or IE8) you're actually replacing some system DLLs. This is the reason why you "get" IE6 when you uninstall IE7.
Chris Wilson, IE Architect, addressed this issue in a blog post Multiple IEs on one machine. Chris states that on-the-fly replacement of mshtml.dll might work for CSS rendering "...but it's not the same as having a full set of new IE system DLLs installed" and would certainly not be considered a definitive solution.
Only virtualization can provide the full DLL stack for definitive testing.
Edit:
On March 18, 2009, the Microsoft Expression Web team released SuperPreview a free stand-alone application that allows cross-browser side-by-side and onionskin comparison between IE8, IE8-IE7-Compatibility mode, and IE6. Additional browsers and an on-demand service to render pages in realtime on other operating systems is planned.
Edit in response to Zac comment
Thanks for the comment. Expression Web 3 (which will include SuperPreview) will allow comparison between any combination of IE6, IE7, IE8, and Firefox 3. This according to Somasgear's blog entry Expresion Web 3 posted on June 5, 2009. In the screenshot on his blog, you'll see Firefox 3 as the base browser (left side) and IE6 as the comparison browser. Any browser can be placed on either side of the comparison window.
