That is cool. I'm jealous of your knowledge base. I briefly considered Anthropology as a career, but then decided against. I'd have to move and I didn't want that. I've read countless books on Hominins. Some on Hominids, but only a few. That field astounds me. I can't get enough of it. My daughter wants to get into Paleoanthropology as a career. Despite decades of independent study, she now eclipses me in many subsets of the discipline. It's what she reads for fun. And I agree with you. 100%. Bringing back an intelligent being should not be done. Period. And they were JUST as intelligent as we were. The FoxP2 gene is present, so they had language (did I get that right?). And their exit was not that long ago. A lot of the genome we have is from an arm bone we borrowed from Russia if I'm not mistaken. It was a treasure trove. All we needed was a very small piece to get what we needed. Scary man......Just.....Scary.My scientific background is primarily in human population genetics (or at least what I focused on during grad school). The reality is that while we have a lot of genetic information on most hominids resurrecting them is a giant ethical dilemma considering that they became extinct since they were not able to compete resources with us not to mention that an intelligent being brought back for academic purposes is just terrifying on so many levels… just too many variables and too much that can go wrong. I have so much respect for life in general that perhaps I’m over cautious with how we use genetic engineering. Genetic engineering to better the current species on the planet from a health perspective and not enhancement? Yes, I’m all for it. The rest starts to become very gray. But again, a limited personal perspective like anyone else’s. I can only see what’s in front of me and wh at I might imagine. Reality is a whole other ball game.