Jurassic Playground

Over the weekend I watched Jurassic Park for the first time in many months, perhaps even years. Despite the caricatures that substitute for believable characters, the dinosaurs are mostly believable and the warning tone appropriate. Throughout Dr. Malcolm cautions against “playing God” – an interesting perspective for a character who ascribes so fully to chaos theory. So when the television was off and the dinosaurs once again safely extinct, I continued to ponder this notion of “playing God.”

Quite often the phrase occurs in two main contexts: those of science and ethics. When humans have discovered the naturalistic explanation for a phenomenon and devise a human means of altering it, we are then in the realm of “playing God.” It seems to me that this is only a difference of degree from what people, and other creatures, have always done. Does not every action we take have endless ramifications? In our own little chaotic system, our decisions and activities impact others just as surely as a T-rex stomping through the park. It is only a matter of degree.

As human beings we may be the only animals that consciously “play God,” but the truth of the matter is that we are all pieces in an intricately interconnected system. Animals, even plants (behold the kudzu!), influence the activities of others, changing courses of rivers, degrading the environment, blocking the paths of ants, ant-eaters, or ant-eater eaters. What could be more natural than “playing God?” This, of course, doesn’t change the ethical angle, but throws it open much wider. Should we clone dinosaurs? Should we clone people? Don’t ask me – I’m too busy playing God in my own little corner of the world.

T-rex plays God

4 thoughts on “Jurassic Playground

  1. See, we are connected.
    I also watched it the same time you did — with my kids. First time since the first viewing.
    Concerning “playing god”, I think it has something to do with “No”. I hope to post something brief on this tomorrow morning.

    (PS – your system does not notify me when people respond to your posts even though I check “notify”. Not sure why.)

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    • Steve Wiggins

      Thanks, Sabio. Perhaps we were separated at birth! I’m not sure why the notify function doesn’t work; there have been a few quirks in my experience at WordPress, but not enough to send me off to another hosting site.

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  2. Jim W.

    We are all creatures indigenous to this planet whether we are humans or lemmings. One of my pet peeves (of which I have quite an extensive list by the way) is when people separate the world into: ‘Natural’ and ‘manmade’. I have a saying that I use that garners me some of the most quizzical looks you’re likely to see; “A Wal-Mart shopping center is as natural as a ponderosa pine tree.”

    True, we can affect change much more than other species but, as you say, “It’s just a difference of degree.” Personally I think we should be better caretakers of our planet, sort of like…. “Playing God”.

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  3. janeb

    North America faces years of toxic oil rain from BP oil spill chemic

    http://www.examiner .com:80/x- 33986-Political- Spin-Examiner~
    y2010m6d17- North-America- facing-years- of-toxic- rain-from-
    poisonous- BP-oil-spill- dispersants

    North America will be facing years of toxic rain becuase of the
    poisonous chemical dispersants BP is using to control the Gulf of Mexico
    oil spill.
    Related articles
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    _/*See more >>>*/_

    When you pour more than a million gallons of toxic chemical dispersants

    on top of an oil spill, it doesn’t just disappear. In this case, it
    moves to the atmosphere, where it will travel hundreds, if not thousands
    of miles from the site of the BP oil spill, in the form of toxic rain.

    BP’s oil spill-fighting dispersant of choice is Corexit 9500. It has
    been banned in Europe for good reason. Corexit 9500 is one of the most
    environmentally enduring, toxic chemical dispersants

    ever created to battle an oil spill. Add to that the millions of
    gallons of oil that have been burned, releasing even more toxins into
    the atmosphere,
    and
    you have a recipe for something much worse than acid rain.

    The European Union Times reports “A dire
    report prepared for President Medvedev by Russia’s Ministry of Natural
    Resources is warning
    today that the British Petroleum (BP) oil and gas leak in the Gulf of
    Mexico is about to become the worst environmental catastrophe in all of
    human history threatening the entire eastern half of the North American
    continent with /”total destruction” ./

    The reports adds, “Russian scientists are basing their apocalyptic
    destruction assessment due to BP’s use of millions of gallons of the
    chemical dispersal agent known as Corexit 9500
    which is being pumped
    directly into the leak of this wellhead over a mile under the Gulf of
    Mexico waters and designed, this report says, to keep hidden from the
    American public the full, and tragic, extent of this leak that is now
    estimated to be over 2.9 million gallons a day
    .”

    Oil in the environment is toxic at 11 PPM (parts per million). Corexit
    9500 is toxic at only 2.61 PPM.
    But Corexit 9500 has another precarious characteristic; it’s reaction to
    warm water.

    As the water in the Gulf of Mexico heats up, Corexit 9500 goes through a
    molecular transition. It changes from a liquid to a gas, which is
    readily absorbed by clouds and released as toxic rain. The
    chemical-laden rain then falls on crops, reservoirs, animals and of
    course, people.

    It is futile to believe that we can keep ‘Corexit rain’ from occurring
    since it has already been released
    and
    the molecular transformation has begun. We have set off an unprecedented
    chain of events in nature that we cannot control.

    By releasing Pandora’s well from the depths and allowing it bleed into
    the sea the unimaginable becomes material.

    Yet unlike a bad dream, we will not wake up from this nightmare and find
    it gone. The BP Gulf of Mexico oil spill will be touching millions of
    earth’s life forms for uncountable years.

    Like

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