this post was submitted on 13 Jul 2025
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Science Memes

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[–] CarbonIceDragon@pawb.social 153 points 1 week ago (30 children)

I've long found the notion that the lesson of Jurassic Park, if a fictional story like that must be taken to have one, should be something like "science/genetic engineering is bad" or "you can't control nature" to be a bit silly, given that, well, it's a zoo. With pretty big animals, to be sure, but dinosaurs were animals still, not kaiju or dragons or whatever other fantasy monster, and some genetically modified to be somewhat bigger and lack feathers would still be such. It's a story about some people building a zoo badly because they didn't do their due diligence about the animals they had and cheaped out on staff and the systems they had for containing the animals, and somehow people get the take away that "these animals are special and can't be safely contained" rather than "letting rich people cheap out on safety is a bad idea".

Were one to write a broadly similar story where someone cheaps out on a park containing elephants and tigers, and they get out and maul some people, it'd be obvious, but give the tigers scales and make them born in a lab and suddenly it's a monster movie.

[–] LunarLoony@lemmy.sdf.org 6 points 1 week ago (3 children)

I've just realised - Hammond was such a cheapskate that even the seatbelts in the helicopters didn't work properly.

[–] chuymatt@startrek.website 14 points 1 week ago (2 children)

No. It was basically the paleontologist is a Luddite to the extent he did not realize he needed to find the other end, as he had another seats female end as well. He made two females work… which could be a reference to the rest of the movie.

[–] Doc_Crankenstein@slrpnk.net 2 points 6 days ago

Sam Neill, the actor who did the scene, has been asked about the scene before and confirmed it is 100% unintentionally foreshadowing.

It was just supposed to confirm that Grant is in fact a Luddite who struggles with tech of all sorts.

[–] b3an@lemmy.world 3 points 1 week ago

I love this. To quote an expert: “Life, uh, finds a way.”

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