Your argument suggests that the existence of an ‘uplift box’ that turns dogs into people would give people-rights to dogs, as the process would have been automated. To the extent that turning a baby into a person is automated, it doesn’t mean that any less work is done—it just means that the work has been done by natural selection rather than human ingenuity. So I think the ‘work needed’ measure of how beings of potential value inherit value is somewhat flawed, the flaw coming from thinking about one particular dog and the work needed to raise it to human status, while neglecting the next billion dogs.
As to the caterpillar/butterfly analogy: if we agree that we value butterflies for their beauty, it’s not at all obvious that we shouldn’t breed them for their beauty. Analogously, with limited parental resources, why should humans not produce an excess of babies (or heterogenous fetuses, for that matter) and select based on the predicted characteristics of the adult? Note that in this case we raise our expected utility, whereas in the case of killing a sleeping human we most definitely lower it.
EDIT: I should make my own position clear on this. I vigorously oppose infanticide based in large part on the great psychological and social harm it inflicts. I have basically no problem with zygote selection.
Your argument suggests that the existence of an ‘uplift box’ that turns dogs into people would give people-rights to dogs, as the process would have been automated.
I’m not terribly concerned about that case, and I think my framework handles it pretty gracefully. If dogs have unique characters and can become people in a non-fungible way just like babies have unique characters and can become people in a non-fungible way, then dogs deserve baby rights.
But there’s an underlying issue that highlights: whether our ethics are focused on conservation or, for lack of a better word, quality. A conservation-centered ethic sees people as irreplaceable and expensive; a quality-centered ethic sees people as replaceable. If you can make a million unique sapient simulated people at the push of a button, then the conservationalist ethic simply doesn’t seem appropriate- they’re eminently replacable, and so they’ve become fungible in the way I suggest sperm are, even though they’re cognizant enough to be people. Likewise, by the time the ability exists to turn a dog into a person, it’s not clear that personhood will be sufficient to grant the rights that it does now.
As to the caterpillar/butterfly analogy: if we agree that we value butterflies for their beauty, it’s not at all obvious that we shouldn’t breed them for their beauty. Analogously, with limited parental resources, why should humans not produce an excess of babies (or heterogenous fetuses, for that matter) and select based on the predicted characteristics of the adult?
Note that while butterflies are valuable because of their beauty, people have rights because of their uniqueness/irreplaceability. I don’t see anything wrong with designer babies or human genetic engineering; I just have a moderate preference for gamete selection over zygote selection, and think that if we have reached a point where we are willing to kill undesirable babies we will probably also have reached a point where we are willing to kill undesirable adults, as eroding one protection appears like it will erode the other.
Your argument suggests that the existence of an ‘uplift box’ that turns dogs into people would give people-rights to dogs, as the process would have been automated. To the extent that turning a baby into a person is automated, it doesn’t mean that any less work is done—it just means that the work has been done by natural selection rather than human ingenuity. So I think the ‘work needed’ measure of how beings of potential value inherit value is somewhat flawed, the flaw coming from thinking about one particular dog and the work needed to raise it to human status, while neglecting the next billion dogs.
As to the caterpillar/butterfly analogy: if we agree that we value butterflies for their beauty, it’s not at all obvious that we shouldn’t breed them for their beauty. Analogously, with limited parental resources, why should humans not produce an excess of babies (or heterogenous fetuses, for that matter) and select based on the predicted characteristics of the adult? Note that in this case we raise our expected utility, whereas in the case of killing a sleeping human we most definitely lower it.
EDIT: I should make my own position clear on this. I vigorously oppose infanticide based in large part on the great psychological and social harm it inflicts. I have basically no problem with zygote selection.
I’m not terribly concerned about that case, and I think my framework handles it pretty gracefully. If dogs have unique characters and can become people in a non-fungible way just like babies have unique characters and can become people in a non-fungible way, then dogs deserve baby rights.
But there’s an underlying issue that highlights: whether our ethics are focused on conservation or, for lack of a better word, quality. A conservation-centered ethic sees people as irreplaceable and expensive; a quality-centered ethic sees people as replaceable. If you can make a million unique sapient simulated people at the push of a button, then the conservationalist ethic simply doesn’t seem appropriate- they’re eminently replacable, and so they’ve become fungible in the way I suggest sperm are, even though they’re cognizant enough to be people. Likewise, by the time the ability exists to turn a dog into a person, it’s not clear that personhood will be sufficient to grant the rights that it does now.
Note that while butterflies are valuable because of their beauty, people have rights because of their uniqueness/irreplaceability. I don’t see anything wrong with designer babies or human genetic engineering; I just have a moderate preference for gamete selection over zygote selection, and think that if we have reached a point where we are willing to kill undesirable babies we will probably also have reached a point where we are willing to kill undesirable adults, as eroding one protection appears like it will erode the other.