- Edited
-Mac You obviously don’t like evolution much.
What makes you say that? I am in awe at the ability of evolution to “find solutions” to environmental conditions that are as difficult and varied as they are - and I’m even more in awe at the elegance of some of these solutions and the goofyness of others. I have pretty much all the books by Dawkins, and I very much enjoy re-reading Stephen Jay Gould.
I simply don’t think that “evolved” entities automatically deserve a special place in and of themselves. Ethics - it seems to me - should depend on the complexity of the entity and how ‘intelligent’ (and we can debate what that means) it is, not on whether it’s the result of however many millions of years of biochemically-driven evolution or a few tens (hundreds?) of years of technical evolution.
I think Gagaryn and DavecUK have summarised my position much more clearly than I have managed to do in the last two days.