A new article by Michael Egnor is seemingly a big mistake, for it is invalid and unnecessarily opens up a likely way for materialists to be bolstered in the culture wars. The article is "Is an Immaterial Mind a Barrier to Human Cloning":
From a follow-on article:
It appears to me that it is only a matter of time before human cloning will be achieved. Chinese researchers unbothered by ethical or moral concerns are actively working on this right now. It may take a long time, but I think it is inevitable. I think the result will be a cloned, rational and abstractly thinking human being, but this will in no way invalidate immaterialism in theories of consciousness.
It seems to me these articles are mistaken in their conclusions - there is a major flaw in Egnor's reasoning. Unfortunately, Egnor appears not to subscribe to the filter or receiver/transmitter theory of interactive dualism. With this understanding of consciousness, it interacts with and manifests in the physical world through the physical body via the specialized organs of the brain and nervous system. In this theory of consciousness (for which there is a lot of empirical evidence in different areas), since a cloned human being would have these specialized organs, he/she would therefore still manifest the intelligence and rational and abstract thought of a conscious entity, just as with normally born humans.
Human cloning will be a vast moral and ethical mistake with a lot of bad consequences outweighing by far the medical research benefits, but if and when it is achieved it will not invalidate spiritual metaphysical understandings of human existence.
(This post was last modified: 2019-07-12, 09:17 PM by nbtruthman.)
Quote:"The logic is simple. If abstract thought arises from the material brain, then it should be possible to clone a rational human being by material means. Cloning of non-human (i.e. wholly material) animals has been done countless times and is now almost routine. If man is wholly material and if abstract thought is merely a material power of the mind, then cloning a human being with the capacity for abstract thought is possible and ought to be achievable.
...if the human intellect and will are immaterial, a rational man cannot be cloned, because the immaterial power of the mind does not arise from matter and thus cannot be created merely by making a material copy. The power of abstract thought does not arise from DNA or protein or any matter that can be duplicated. In the immaterialist view, more than matter is needed to make a man.
It is worth noting that the evidence to date strongly supports the immaterialist view: human cloning has thus far been a scientific dead end. Despite claims to have produced cloned human embryos by somatic cell nuclear transfer, the gestation of humans with growth to rational adulthood (i.e. humans capable of rational thought) has never been achieved."
From a follow-on article:
Quote:"How could we know that a reproductive clone has a spiritual soul? Simple. A human being has the abstract immaterial ability to use language, to reason, to abstract general concepts from particular things, to use logic, to think about God, and to exercise free will. An individual without a spiritual soul would lack abstract thought but could have sensation, perception, imagination, memory, emotions, etc. That is to say, an individual without a spiritual soul would have all the powers of an animal, but would not have human intellect and free will."
It appears to me that it is only a matter of time before human cloning will be achieved. Chinese researchers unbothered by ethical or moral concerns are actively working on this right now. It may take a long time, but I think it is inevitable. I think the result will be a cloned, rational and abstractly thinking human being, but this will in no way invalidate immaterialism in theories of consciousness.
It seems to me these articles are mistaken in their conclusions - there is a major flaw in Egnor's reasoning. Unfortunately, Egnor appears not to subscribe to the filter or receiver/transmitter theory of interactive dualism. With this understanding of consciousness, it interacts with and manifests in the physical world through the physical body via the specialized organs of the brain and nervous system. In this theory of consciousness (for which there is a lot of empirical evidence in different areas), since a cloned human being would have these specialized organs, he/she would therefore still manifest the intelligence and rational and abstract thought of a conscious entity, just as with normally born humans.
Human cloning will be a vast moral and ethical mistake with a lot of bad consequences outweighing by far the medical research benefits, but if and when it is achieved it will not invalidate spiritual metaphysical understandings of human existence.