And as fair as that view is, I wouldn’t do “trial and error involving the likelihood of death” on humans, or for me, most (if not all) living creatures.
So that’s gonna be a controversial sell, and using “save the dolphins” that leave out crucial info isnt going to be it…
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keiko_(orca)
They tried this with the whale from Free Willy, and the whale failed to adapt to the wild before dying.
That was a Hollywood movie.
https://savedolphins.eii.org/campaigns/fow
Love how your source doesn’t actually say the orca released only lived a little while before dying
https://www.nbcnews.com/id/wbna3700297
It shows hope for the future. It would be bleaker if we did not keep trying. The alternative is life in a cement jail.
Does it?
It shows dying early deaths. Is that better than a life in a (better) captive place?
Definitely, trial and error for a solution is better than giving up. The long term as a solution would provide forever after that point.
Some deaths would provide for no deaths in the future.
Just my plebe thoughts is all.
And as fair as that view is, I wouldn’t do “trial and error involving the likelihood of death” on humans, or for me, most (if not all) living creatures.
So that’s gonna be a controversial sell, and using “save the dolphins” that leave out crucial info isnt going to be it…
I agree it’s untenable.
There would be many peops that agree to take that risk on.
Even though, it would be a no go right from the start due to funding and as you mentioned harm to others.
The thought I had is far beyond my pay grade so to speak but would not a few deaths on either side be worth it to save many many more in the future?
No, it’s not ethical.
It’s unacceptable to do that to humans in a ‘modern Western’s’ clinical ethics setting.
I agrue it’s still unethical to do to animals…
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They tried, in real life, with the animal that was cast as the character in the movie.