One of my concerns about the future of the study of the natural world is that we have taken so much from it and altered it so much that we may one day not be able to objectively and scientifically study it.
For example, we have dug every fossil from the Earth which we have found, subjected them to several tests such as carbon-dating which affects their composition, and stored them away. One day we may not have any fossils which have not been altered by testing. Remember Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle - that merely observing something changes it. Fossils stored in museums could be damaged or stolen, and in time we may not have any left.
Will we reach a point where we have altered the products of natural history so much that we can no longer scientifically study it?
For example, we have dug every fossil from the Earth which we have found, subjected them to several tests such as carbon-dating which affects their composition, and stored them away. One day we may not have any fossils which have not been altered by testing. Remember Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle - that merely observing something changes it. Fossils stored in museums could be damaged or stolen, and in time we may not have any left.
Will we reach a point where we have altered the products of natural history so much that we can no longer scientifically study it?