From: Technotranscendence (neptune@mars.superlink.net)
Date: Wed Dec 01 1999 - 21:21:00 MST
On Wednesday, December 01, 1999 3:04 PM Glen Delvieron@aol.com wrote:
> I suppose it would depend on the species of octopod[sic!:)], and how much
of their
> previous behavioral structure remains in the uplift. There are some
octopods
> which are canibalistic, and there are some that die after reproducing.
Would
> these themes still be present in our uplifted octopods? If so, it may
make
> for some friction from having different perspectives than humans on these
> questions.
Good point! These are some of things we discussed in the last spat of
posting on this topic. I would imagine some of the previous structure would
be maintained. It would kind of be pointless to just create humans, since
there's an easier way to do that.:)
One of the concerns voiced previously. If a species which is carnivorous is
uplifted, it might see humans as competition. Of course, this might be more
of a nuisance than a bona fide threat.
The lifespan issue is very important too. It might be considered cruel to
uplift a creature that can only live such a brief life. (This might be
subjective, but I think a life span of three years is too short. Heck, I'm
interested in immortality just like most of you.:)
Cheers!
Daniel Ust
http://mars.superlink.net/neptune/
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