^ That's the thing though. At what point does a computer AI become sentient. Should I start feeling bad for those millions of Goombas I've stomped on over the years?
^ Of course, the problem with something like that is I'd have to accept that binary computing is capable of creating life. I'd have to accept that my copy of Visual Studios 2008 (or hell, even Notepad) can create life. All we need is a strong enough processor, enough RAM, huge hard drive, and a pretty sweet video card to run it.
jekyl; seyz
The Doctor is a wonderful case study in this sort of thing. Much like a human child, I don't think he was sentient right out of the box. It took time, as it does for us - we don't develop theory of mind, the key to self-awareness, until around age three.
Not true. He was completely sentient right out of the box, or all holograms left "on" for long enough will become senitent, or he never is or was or could be sentient with out something extraordinary beyond the programers comprehension happening, but no "one" magic moment marked his birth as a person more so than when they turned him on in the beginning when he clearly had the factory standard settings, so it's all or nothing I'm afraid.
Unless the Doctor didn't notice his magic moment, and just assumed that he had always been sentient after he had become a real thinking person despite that earlier in his "life" that he wasn't.
That so xatso?
You argument might be fine for good reasons not to club baby seals or farm whale blubber or rape the rain forests, but honestly how many human lives would you sacrifice to save a toaster from falling into bathtub?
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