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posted by martyb on Wednesday December 28 2016, @05:29AM   Printer-friendly
from the who-needs-'em? dept.

In October, the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) released its biennial Living Planet Report, detailing the state of the planet and its implications for humans and wildlife. The report warned that two-thirds of global wildlife populations could be gone by 2020 if we don't change our environmentally damaging practices.

At the Singularity University New Zealand (SUNZ) Summit we met up with Dr Amy Fletcher, Senior Lecturer in Political Science at the University of Canterbury, who spoke on the topic of public policy and exponential technology at the Summit. As part of our regular "One Big Question [OBQ]" series we asked her whether we should consider bioengineering animals that could live in the world we're creating, rather than die in the one we're destroying?

That sort of relates to the whole de-extinction debate, and again, I would pay money to see a woolly mammoth. But I do take the point that the world of the woolly mammoth is gone, whether we like it or not, same with the moa – I mean this comes up a lot in criticisms of the bring back the moa project. You've got to have huge swathes of undeveloped space - maybe we still have that, but we don't have as much as we did in the 16th century.

I guess it comes back to not making the perfect the enemy of the good. Working in conservation, extinction issues like I do, I meet a lot of people who are deeply opposed, actively opposed, say to zoos. I think in an imperfect world, I'd rather have animals in a well run and ethical zoo than not have them at all. But I do have colleagues in the animal rights movement who say, if we don't value them enough to let them live in their natural environment, then we should pay the price of having them go. It's sort of that same thing, I mean, if the alternative to living in a world of simply humans, rats, cockroaches and pigeons is bioengineering animals, I would have to say, alright yeah, we're going to have to do that.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 28 2016, @09:35AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 28 2016, @09:35AM (#446602)

    So the world is off balance and you suggest we push it even further by monkeying with genes? Also, our current level of knowledge in the field amounts to blind guesswork and haphazard stabs in the dark. Not exactly a controlled process towards a known result.

    Human survival is very much dependent on the survival of a large number of other species. (animal and plant etc) Maybe we deserve to go. I'd say even probably.

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 28 2016, @02:21PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 28 2016, @02:21PM (#446688)

    I'd say even probably.

    Sometimes I jump awake with cold sweats thinking of the horror of what if you are wrong and it's not even probably... but odd probably ?.

    See what you've done?