The LRB Podcast

Extinction, Fast and Slow

Oct 22, 2025
Lorraine Daston, Director Emerita at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, dives deep into the complex history of extinction. She discusses how our understanding is skewed by human timescales versus geological epochs. Daston critiques the use of the language of natural selection to justify violence, and she explores the political influences shaping conservation. The conversation also highlights the moral dilemmas of prioritizing species for preservation and the tensions between biodiversity and indigenous rights.
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INSIGHT

Extinction Is A Protracted Process

  • Extinction events unfold over long, stretched timescales rather than instant cataclysms.
  • Humans mis-imagine these as sudden because of nuclear and cinematic analogies.
INSIGHT

Fossils Shattered Belief In Permanence

  • Fossil discoveries forced scientists to accept species could disappear.
  • Growing global exploration made 'hidden' surviving populations increasingly implausible.
INSIGHT

Linnaeus Favored A Steady Natural Economy

  • Linnaeus resisted extinction to preserve a balanced 'economia' of nature.
  • He feared removing species would destabilize the intricate web of interdependencies.
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