Then it wouldn't be the an appropriate substitute for the biological analogues. They would just be sex dolls, like the ones they sell in Japan already.BlackWidower said:Well then you don't get AI to act emotionally.
I'm not sure where you get that, but I'll go ahead and say that I'm perfectly comfortable (at the moment; my intuition tells me there are complicating factors that I'm waiting to be fully addressed, here hopefully) with the idea of making altered human clones that do not think or feel as using them as property.BlackWidower said:But reading all you wrote, it seems your underlying thesis is we shouldn't do it at all. Negating your original argument.
This leads us right back on topic -- why would you be fighting for their rights when they're not even proper humans? If they (and I'm suggesting, for the sake of argument, that all of the following is true) cannot think independently, remember, feel pain, or otherwise display things that would define them as human aside from their biology, what makes them different than a potted plant?BlackWidower said:Plus, you say if we experiment with the clones enough it will be fine, which will be easy while working with clones who have no rights. I have a hard time believing anyone will stand by while someone else says clones have no rights. I know I'll be one of the many fighting for clone rights.
Actually, I can see how, at one point, while the "kinks" were being worked out, we might end up experimenting with beings that maintain certain human attributes. There is a perfectly legitimate case for unethical experimentation there. I want to jump ahead and discuss hypothetically, as in the OP, the morality of creating these "human objects" after the process has been perfected, however that may have happened.