THE “RESURRECTION GAMBIT”
This important story was shared by T.S., and it's about a subject I've blogged about previously, and it's worth doing so again. The subject, as the headline of the blog indicates, is what I think I am going to start calling "the Resurrection Gambit." By this I mean the attempt by scientismists to literally restore extinct species to existence through the techniques of genetic engineering, cloning, and so on. In other words, it's a real life "Jurassic Park" scenario, of scientists "resurrecting" long extinct species, in the case of the "Jurassic Park" scenario, dinosaurs, and for the purposes of putting them in a sort of "megolithic zoo" for entertainment. Most readers here will know the story: the whole thing quickly gets out of control as the dinosaurs view the strange little hairless monkeys snapping pictures of them as ready-made meals-on-wheels. Well, now they want to resurrect the Tasmanian Tiger:
What is interesting here is that one notices a distinctive shift in the type of argument being advanced for bringing back the strange dog-like marsupial, and the counter-arguments being offered by local aboriginal leaders. Here's the case for "de-extinction" of the species:
Known for its distinctive striped coat and dog-like features, the Tasmanian tiger was last seen alive in 1936. As Tasmania’s top predator, it played a critical role in maintaining the island’s ecological balance. With its disappearance, smaller herbivores like wallabies flourished, damaging local vegetation and threatening the ecosystem. Now, researchers argue that bringing back the thylacine could reverse some of these changes by reintroducing a natural predator into the landscape.
In other words, the "de-extinction" is being argued to restore a lost environmental balance caused by the loss of the species(let us call it what it really is, by the name that indicates the ultimate goal of all this scientism: resurrection, and "immortality"). The reader will have noted immediately that there is an implicit assumption in the argument, namely, that the previous situation in Tasmania, the situation obtaining prior to 1936, represented a sort of "ideal balance", which the situation after 1936 and the massive human intervention, does not. And behind this, there is another implicit assumption, namely, that human beings and their activities are somehow something "set apart" from that "environmental balance", except, of course, when that activity is being used to "restore it." But this assumption contains within it a self-contradiction, and it is a contradiction that will not go away: what, exactly, distinguishes one set of human activities on the environment from another? Might not an attempted restoration of that environmental balance that obtained prior to 1936 and the Tasmanian Tiger's extinction result in yet another set of imbalances even more catastrophic?
Ultimately, the "resurrection gambit" thus exposes a fundamental fallacy with all the prognostications about science, mankind's activity, and its environmental impact: the idea of some sort of ideal environmental balance is a metaphysical assumption rather than a product of empirical science, because the latter is perpetually changing, because of human and other factors. Mind you, there's nothing wrong with making metaphysical assumptions; we all do it, all the time, and in many cases they're necessary to human thought. But this also means that it is vital to distinguish them from science per se. This problematic is exposed by the counter-argument that aboriginal Tasmanians are making about the gambit:
The project has also sparked discussions within Tasmania’s indigenous communities, who caution against tampering with nature. Emma Lee, a Tasmanian aboriginal elder and environmental expert, expresses skepticism about what she calls a “colonial approach” to science. She stresses that conservation efforts should prioritize current species and that the thylacine’s extinction itself was a byproduct of European hunting practices. For many, the ethical implications of this project loom as large as its scientific hurdles.
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