Oh you'll LOVE these in-depth responses.
For most of this I simply copied your responses to see what he'd say. Apparently we're all wrong.
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Originally Posted by justforfun000
Oh really? Evidence please...
It goes the other way around, you are supposed to provide evidence FOR sentience. Absolutely NONE was found in any animal up to date (save for relatively large intellectual capacity in animals such as monkeys and dolfins, which is not the same as self awarness anyway).
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Humans are not the only species on Earth to have passed several of the tests for sentience.
Chimpanzees, dolphins (and possibly parrots) have passed the mirror test.
Chimpanzees, dolphins and parrots can all learn speech (as well as gorillas, apparently); they may not have developed it independently as of yet, but they possess the capability to understand and utilize it.
Learning has nothing to do with self awarness.
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Chimpanzees and dolphins have also shown the propensity for learned tool use (termite-gathering sticks for chimpanzees, sponges to protect their beaks for dolphins).
Again, nothing to indicate self-awarness.
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Humans may be the only species that has passed all three tests completely - we're the only species known to have developed language without outside prompting, for one - but we're far from the only species to have a high degree of self-awareness.
You'd be right if you replaced that word with "intelligence" which is =/= self-awarness.
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Claiming an animal doesn't care about pain is rather retarded, most more advanced ones, which are inevitably the ones used in testing most certainly do care about and notice pain. Otherwise beating a dog every day wouldn't make it hate and attack you.
You don't need to resort to self-awarness to explain such simple behaviours. The dog is attacking a percieved threat, what do you have to prove that the dog actually understands anything of what's going on, instead of acting on pure pre-programmed reflexes? (which include the ability to learn new things, ie Pavlov)
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Step on a dog's tail, listen to it yelp and move away from you. Same for a cat, except the cat won't return to you for several minutes while the dog will 'accept your apology' far quicker.
So? Different animals react to the same stimulations differently as a result of their differing physiology. Not to mention that dogs have been bred to be loyal for millenia, while cats weren't.
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If an animal didn't care about pain, why do Vets have to hold an animal down just to give it a shot? Why do wounded animals strike out when you touch the injured part?
Survival instinct?
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If animals don't care about the pain they feel, then WHY DO THEY TRY TO GET AWAY FROM THE SOURCE OF THE PAIN?
Survival instinct?
I don't think it'd be very hard to create a program that simulates all those behaviours, and then conclude that the program is therefore self-aware.
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Because some people might feel they made themselves LESS then human beings by doing such despicable acts that even the animal kingdom has no comparison of evil behaviour.
"Evil"? Whose evil? Do you consider cannibalism evil, for example? Cause animals practice that. Would you consider eating your own offspring as evil? Animals do that too. Simply killing humans for causes other than food, and on a larger scale, does not make humans somehow more "evil" than animals acting on pure instinct.
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Secondly, you will ALWAYS get better results testing humans since that is what you are trying to figure out it in the FIRST place.
But then you'll be hurting HUMANS, which would be immoral. Hurting animals is not, and should not be immoral.
You have to realize that most Christian "moral values" behaviour is not really about "protecting" anyone; it's about their desire to send a continual stream of messages of condemnation towards people whose existence offends them. - Darth Wong alias Mike Wong
"There is nothing wrong with being ignorant. However, there is something very wrong with not choosing to exchange ignorance for knowledge when the opportunity presents itself."