Species revival: should we bring back extinct species?

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Popperfoto/Getty Images via National Geographic

The following is an edited excerpt.

Scientific developments—principally advances in cloning technologies and new methods of not only reading DNA, but writing it—make it much easier to concoct a genetic approximation of an extinct species, so long as DNA can be retrieved from a preserved specimen.

Most arguments in favor of species revival fall into two basic camps: Why impede the progress of science? And we should do it because we have an obligation to do it, to right some of the enormous wrong we have done.

[But] do we really need a reason to revive a vanished species? In my own experience, whether fans of de-extinction begin their justification from a scientific rationale or a moral one, they usually end by saying something like “besides, it’s just such a really cool idea.”

View the original article here: Species Revival: Should We Bring Back Extinct Animals?

Additional Resources:

  • Is extinction really such a bad thing?” New Scientist
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