No. Sourcing a script executes the commands contained therein. There is no guarantee that the script doesn't do things that can't be undone (like remove files or whatever).
If the script only sets some variables and/or runs some harmless commands, then you can "undo" its action by unsetting the same variables, but even then the script might have replaced variables that already had values before with new ones, and to undo it you'd have to remember what the old values were.
If you source a script that sets some variables for your environment but you want this to be undoable, I suggest you start a new (sub)shell first and source the script in the subshell. Then to reset the environment to what it was before, just exit the subshell.
unset
commands to undo everything.