T
ThePuppyTurtle
Guest
Alright, so this is a weird one, but I do think it is a legitimate question.
Thomas Aquinas defined a human as a Rational Animal. He does not make any reference to belonging to the species homo sapiens, merely to being rational, and an animal, ie something which is basically capable of moving about.
For instance, if a mad scientist were to take a human, and change every cell in their body until a scientist was utterly incapable of distinguishing them from a dolphin, cockroach, or T-Rex, but leave their rationality intact, they would still be a human.
Further, if one were to create a human in a lab, atom by atom, from scratch or from whatever he had lying around, they would be a rational animal, and thus a human, correct?
Further, even if the entity was not, in shape, a member of the species homo sapiens, they would still be human in a theological sense if they were rational and capable of motion, correct?
Further, if he were to do so from a dolphin, altering only his brain so as to grant him rationality, thus creating a dolphin shaped rational animal, this entity would also be a rational animal, and thus a human, correct?
However, if it is true if a scientist does it, it must also be true if nature does it, correct?
Hence, if the forces of random mutation and natural selection, assuming they are capable of such things, were to bring about rationality in a dolphin, which would then spread to the whole pod, and outside of it, such a creature would be a rational animal, and thus a human according to a theologian, even if not to a scientist, correct?
Note that I am assuming that God is cooperating with this process by supplying a rational soul. He does this when humans create a body naturally, unnaturally, through in vitro fertilization, and, presumably, unnaturally through cloning, so there is no reason to be certain that he would not in the cases I presented.
Please don’t just laugh me off and cite some teaching about only humans having rational spirits. If you are going to cite a document, make sure it is a binding teaching that only members of the species of homo sapiens count as rational animals. Also, don’t simply respond that you don’t believe this to have ever happened in fact. It is possible that it hasn’t actually occurred while still being something which could occur, or that will occur in the future.
Thomas Aquinas defined a human as a Rational Animal. He does not make any reference to belonging to the species homo sapiens, merely to being rational, and an animal, ie something which is basically capable of moving about.
For instance, if a mad scientist were to take a human, and change every cell in their body until a scientist was utterly incapable of distinguishing them from a dolphin, cockroach, or T-Rex, but leave their rationality intact, they would still be a human.
Further, if one were to create a human in a lab, atom by atom, from scratch or from whatever he had lying around, they would be a rational animal, and thus a human, correct?
Further, even if the entity was not, in shape, a member of the species homo sapiens, they would still be human in a theological sense if they were rational and capable of motion, correct?
Further, if he were to do so from a dolphin, altering only his brain so as to grant him rationality, thus creating a dolphin shaped rational animal, this entity would also be a rational animal, and thus a human, correct?
However, if it is true if a scientist does it, it must also be true if nature does it, correct?
Hence, if the forces of random mutation and natural selection, assuming they are capable of such things, were to bring about rationality in a dolphin, which would then spread to the whole pod, and outside of it, such a creature would be a rational animal, and thus a human according to a theologian, even if not to a scientist, correct?
Note that I am assuming that God is cooperating with this process by supplying a rational soul. He does this when humans create a body naturally, unnaturally, through in vitro fertilization, and, presumably, unnaturally through cloning, so there is no reason to be certain that he would not in the cases I presented.
Please don’t just laugh me off and cite some teaching about only humans having rational spirits. If you are going to cite a document, make sure it is a binding teaching that only members of the species of homo sapiens count as rational animals. Also, don’t simply respond that you don’t believe this to have ever happened in fact. It is possible that it hasn’t actually occurred while still being something which could occur, or that will occur in the future.