C
carn
Guest
Sentinent beings are just complicated machines it was said.In general, I would consider that anything which affects sentient beings may be said to matter, insofar as it has effects which may be felt. But perhaps that is too broad a conception? Obviously there are degrees of significance involved - the pleasure of enjoying a good meal is not equal to the pleasure and long-term significance of reconnecting with a long-lost friend, and the pain of having a splinter pulled certainly does not equal the pain - or, indeed, the long-term significance - of the pain of childbirth, for example - but at what point is it possible or reasonable to say that any experience does not matter?
Normally if machines create internal and/or external status reports (e.g. car running out of gas), it does matter only, if that report is relevant to the machines purpose.
If humans are just complicated machines arising from natural laws and chance, their status reports (joy, happiness, pain, sorrow) should just be as irrelevant as a warning light blinking in an abandoned car. Only if a purpose exists status reports can be classified into preferrable and less preferrable ones.
Why should the fate of sentinent machines be in any way more relevant than that of non-sentinent machines or animal machines or of the to human eye invisible molecule structures on and in the keyboard im typing on, of which some were surely damaged by me typing this message?