An argument on animal consciousness (soliciting criticism)

Consciousness. I hope we can agree that all living people are conscious and their suffering matters.

But why stop at currently living people? We would probably also agree that earlier people, be it one year, a century, or a millennia ago, were also morally relevant to us. Let’s continue with this reasoning and we come to the conclusion that even people two hundred thousand years ago mattered as well. And here comes the tricky part: it means that prehistoric monkeys also are of moral importance.

Why so, you may ask, aren’t they different species? And the answer is no, for evolution is a slow process and can be observed only on large time scales. We have changed greatly in many ways, we don’t have fur, our brains have changed in size, and no one, but the most athletic people, would now be able to compete with monkeys at tree climbing. But there was not a single complex feature that two organisms had but their children were deprived of. Returning to our example, if a parent was conscious then the child was too (even if marginally less or more so). Therefore, the monkeys that preceded the earliest people were also conscious. But that in turn implies that descendants of those monkeys—i.e current monkeys—do possess the ability to think and experience emotions.


This is one of the arguments that I pondered on and would like to ask for feedback. I have an intuition that there is something off with it but can’t quite grasp it. Any observations on the quality of the argument or a link to relevant literature are appreciated.

There actually is one caveat that I can see myself. If we follow through with the reasoning we come to the conclusion that all species are conscious even bacteria. But, I think, the problem is dealt with in the argument. (evolution occurs on large timescales and since there was an overall trend toward ‘more consciousness’. Monkeys as a species were very close to early humans and therefore also possessed it)