'Jurassic World Rebirth' Perfectly Delivers One of Science's Biggest Ethical Dilemmas
Briefly

Jurassic Park's central theme revolves around the ethical implications of genetic engineering. Ian Malcolm articulates a moral stance against the resurrection of dinosaurs, summarized by his well-known quote connecting man and God in the context of creation and destruction. The films illustrate the dangers of genetic manipulation, especially through the character of D-Rex. While the revival of dinosaurs is practically impossible due to DNA degradation, the broader question posed is relevant: should we resurrect other extinct species? Real-world efforts in conservation echo these themes, provoking thought on the limits of scientific exploration.
God creates dinosaurs. God destroys dinosaurs. God creates man. Man destroys God. Man creates dinosaurs.
Bringing back other species isn't a sci-fi concept - it's something real-world geneticists and conservationists are doing today.
Should we bring back extinct species, even though we can't bring back dinosaurs?
That's the cool thing about science: It really is about exploring. When you're exploring, especially when you don't put limits on it, you never know what you're going to find.
Read at Inverse
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