What the fuck does he think he's typing on? A computer that was designed through religious belief rather than application of scientific principles? What a fucking idiot.
Introducing the new Pentium Zion processor! If it doesn't work, you don't have enough faith!
Good ol' Michael Chritchon, this is an except from his famous book ::dramatic drum roll:: Jurrassic Park. The person saying this is Ian Malcolm (played by Jeff Goldblum in the movie) you must keep in mind though,that just a few chapters from now Ian will slip into terminal delirium, so there is a chance that his mind isn't working correctly at this point and that is what is leading him to say this irrational gibberish.
Crichton is an obvious scientific ignoramus, anyway. He seeks to make people believe that the failures of his fictional theme park are due to irrevocable forces of nature which will spank humanity every time our scientists "cross a line." Instead, it was quite obvious that the failure of the park was due to over-centralized security and extreme incompetence on the part of the designers and staff of the park. However, everyone who sees the film is supposed to skip this perfectly obvious conclusion and think, "We need to leash and chain scientists before something like this ever happens! Down with human cloning! Down with science!"
Hell, the previews for the third installment were enough to make me vomit at the thought of seeing it. When the main character is walking through the destroyed lab and says, "This is what happens when you play God," I decided that the film would be yet
another piece of anti-scientific trash, meant to promote the message that science is some sort of ticking time bomb, and that we will all be punished lest we learn to control our hubris. It's just one, last, desperate attempt by religion to encroach on the scientific domain. They claim that science gives the human race a big head because it has given us so much knowledge and technology, and that we should humble ourselves, or we will be punished.
Here's the question no one ever answers: Why is gaining knowledge and being proud of those discoveries bad?