What strategy does Joseph Bennett use in section #3 that shows the reader he has considered different viewpoints?



(1 point)
Responses

responds to possible counterarguments
responds to possible counterarguments

uses data and statistics
uses data and statistics

uses anecdotes
uses anecdotes

uses testimonials

Section #3

#1) Scientists believe somewhere between 200 and 2,000 species become extinct every year—many more than official counts record. And that number could be even higher. By the time you go to bed tonight, one, 10, or maybe more species that have been on Earth for millions of years will be gone forever.

#2) Although de-extinction has been touted as a way of reversing this horrible trend, this argument doesn’t hold up. For the millions of dollars it would cost to bring one species back from extinction and support it in the wild, we could save dozens more species from going extinct in the first place. Because scientists have limited resources, a decision to do one thing is a decision not to do another: A decision to spend millions on resurrecting one species is a decision to neglect others and allow them to go extinct.

#3) The process of bringing back an extinct species is not only expensive, it’s risky. In most cases, the habitat for the extinct species people want to resurrect is gone or seriously altered. Mammoths, for example, went extinct after the Arctic began warming 10,000 years ago. It’s much warmer there now than it was then, and it’s getting hotter every year. The most likely result of bringing back extinct species is that we’d find ourselves trapped in a cycle where we would need to spend more and more money just to keep their tiny populations alive.

#4)Those who support bringing back extinct species will say that doing so will help support other species. But we already have many important species—such as elephants, tigers, and rhinos—that are in serious trouble. Why not work on keeping them alive? They’ll also argue that by resurrecting an extinct species, we’ll learn many lessons on genetics and breeding. But we can learn exactly the same lessons by working on trying to save living species. There’s also the risk that reintroducing long-extinct species will actually hurt the environment if these species spread out of control.

#5) The evidence is overwhelming: De-extinction is not a good investment for the environment. It may well be interesting science, but it’s not conservation.

In section #3, Joseph Bennett responds to possible counterarguments that support bringing back extinct species. He acknowledges that some people argue that de-extinction can help support other species and that it can provide valuable lessons on genetics and breeding. However, he counters these arguments by stating that these same goals can be achieved by working on saving living species and that there is a risk of reintroduced species harming the environment if they spread out of control. This shows that he has considered different viewpoints and addresses them in his argument.