Friday, October 25, 2019
Jarassic Park: The Dinosaurs Were Not To Blame For The Destruction of Jurassic Park :: essays research papers
 Jarassic Park: The Dinosaurs Were Not To Blame For The Destruction of Jurassic  Park      Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  'Nature won't be stopped .......or blamed for what happens'(Ian Malcolm ,  Jurassic Park by Michael Crichton). Jurassic Park mystifies its critique even  as it makes it; or rather, to be more precise, it offers us contradictory  messages about whom to blame for what goes wrong. Science finally takes the  blame. Near the end of the book, while the humans are fighting off the  velociraptors, Malcolm (the mathematician) delivers a long and didactic speech  about how science is to blame for messing up the world because it has no  morality; science tells us how to do things, not what things are worth doing and  why. Malcolm talks about how the inventions of science, like Jurassic Park, are  fated to exceed our control, just as his chaos theory predicts. According to  Malcolm, chaos theory was developed in response to problems like predicting the  weather, and the theory says it simply can't be predicted beyond the space of a  few days, because the forces involved are too complex and unstable. If  everything in a popular narrative like Jurassic Park really means something else,  then so too does chaos theory.  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  The basic plot of Jurassic Park is fairly simple. A Palo Alto  corporation called International Genetics Technologies, Inc. (InGen) has become  able -- through an entrepreneurial combination of audacity, technology, human  ingenuity, and fantastic outlays of capital (mostly funded by Japanese investors,  who are the only ones willing to wait years for uncertain results) -- to clone  dinosaurs from the bits of their DNA recovered from dinosaur blood inside the  bodies of insects that once bit the now-extinct animals and were then trapped  and preserved in amber for millions of years. (This is, by the way,  theoretically possible.) The project is the dream of John Hammond, a billionaire  capitalist with a passionate interest in dinosaurs, who comes across in the  novel as a bizarre combination of Ross Perot and Ronald Reagan -- part  authoritarian martinet, part dissociated and childish old man. With the  resources of his wealth and power, Hammond buys a rugged island a hundred or so  miles off the coast of Costa Rica and turns it into Jurassic Park, 'the most  advanced amusement park in the world,' with attractions 'so astonishing they  would capture the imagination of the entire world': a population of living,  breathing actual dinosaurs.  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  With the park just a year away from opening to the public (those rich  enough to pay, that is), the nervous investors insist on sending a team to the  island to determine whether or not the park is as safe and under control as    					    
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