Litcius/Paper detail

EXTINCTION AND THE END OF FUTURES*

Dolly Jørgensen

2022History and Theory23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

ABSTRACT Extinction, in biological terms, is the end of an evolutionary line, a potential future cutoff. It involves a transition between the historical past in which a species was biologically alive and a future in which it isn't, a transition from extant to extinct. In this contribution to the “Historical Futures” series, I examine two aspects of extinction histories: transition and anticipation. First, I argue that scholars need to understand extinction as a process with a prolonged and even possibly reversible transition between extant and extinct rather than a definitive end point. Second, I analyze conservation as a practice of anticipatory extinction that tries to create futures for extant species. Extinction, as a nonlinear process, demands that we consider the coterminous past, present, and future. The end of futures for a species requires rethinking how we conceptualize historical (future) endings under times of rapid environmental change.

Topics & Concepts

Extant taxonFutures contractExtinction (optical mineralogy)Extinction eventAnticipation (artificial intelligence)EpistemologyHistoryGeographyEnvironmental ethicsSociologyBiologyEvolutionary biologyPaleontologyPhilosophyEconomicsFinancial economicsComputer scienceDemographyPopulationArtificial intelligenceBiological dispersalAmerican Environmental and Regional HistoryEnvironmental Philosophy and Ethics
EXTINCTION AND THE END OF FUTURES* | Litcius