There's a group in the UK House of Commons right now arguing for the repatriation of human remains to countries they were taken from. The idea is that it's offensive and insensitive to put up as museum exhibits the remains of actual human beings.
This isn't an entirely new concept for us Americans, who already have laws about respecting native American remains. But I wonder how people actually feel about it, on a base level. Look at this guy:
That's Ramesses the Great. Not some statue of him. That's his actual corpse. A real human being. He lived more than three millennia ago, and his remains are currently on display in a museum in Cairo (so this question is not simply about colonialism). How much time must pass before desecration of a corpse becomes scientific inquiry? Is it okay that we have these bodies just sitting around in fancy buildings, for people to pay a nominal fee to gawk at?
Or should we shut the whole enterprise down, and rebury these unfortunate souls?
Curious what people think about this.
This isn't an entirely new concept for us Americans, who already have laws about respecting native American remains. But I wonder how people actually feel about it, on a base level. Look at this guy:

That's Ramesses the Great. Not some statue of him. That's his actual corpse. A real human being. He lived more than three millennia ago, and his remains are currently on display in a museum in Cairo (so this question is not simply about colonialism). How much time must pass before desecration of a corpse becomes scientific inquiry? Is it okay that we have these bodies just sitting around in fancy buildings, for people to pay a nominal fee to gawk at?
Or should we shut the whole enterprise down, and rebury these unfortunate souls?
Curious what people think about this.