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Human being vs person?
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All Flashcards in Topic 1.4
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1.4.111 cards
Human being vs person?
Human being = your biological species. Person = a being with the right mental/moral status (thinks, feels, chooses).
What is a 'person' (philosophically)?
A being with a certain moral and mental status — not just a member of a species.
Warren's five marks of personhood?
Consciousness, reasoning, self-awareness, communication, moral agency.
Consciousness (Warren's mark 1)?
Being able to feel things — pleasure, pain, experience.
Moral agency (Warren's mark 5)?
Being able to weigh right and wrong and act on it.
Why does human ≠ person matter?
It decides who could have full rights — only humans, or any being with the right kind of mind (animals, AI?).
Main objection to Warren's checklist?
It seems to exclude newborns and people who can't yet reason — though Warren protects them for other reasons.
Is being human enough to be a person?
On Warren's view, no — personhood tracks mental abilities, and those aren't tied to one species.
All-or-nothing vs degrees of personhood?
Either you are a person or not, versus personhood being fuller or thinner over a life.
A hard case for personhood?
Infants, great apes, advanced AI, or people in comas — each tests where the line falls.
How do you reach the top band in Section A?
Weigh competing criteria on the hard cases and reach a reasoned conclusion — don't just describe.
1.4.28 cards
Consciousness vs self-consciousness?
Consciousness = having experiences. Self-consciousness = being aware that YOU are the one having them.
Self-consciousness (definition)?
Being aware of yourself as a self — able to think about your own thoughts.
Locke's definition of a person?
A thinking being that can 'consider itself as itself', the same thinking thing across different times and places.
Why is self-awareness the mark of a person (Locke)?
It lets a being treat itself as one continuous 'me' — owning its past and planning its future.
What does self-consciousness unlock?
Ownership of your choices (praise/blame), planning your future, and deciding to change.
Objection to Locke on self-awareness?
Newborns and sleeping adults can't consider themselves right now — Locke replies personhood needs the CAPACITY, not constant use.
Is self-consciousness on/off or a matter of degree?
Maybe degree — some animals show flickers (mirror self-recognition), which matters for animal/AI personhood.
The mirror test hint?
Chimps and dolphins recognising themselves in a mirror suggests self-awareness may be graded, not simply human-only.
1.4.38 cards
What is an agent?
A being that acts for its own reasons — a doer — not just something pushed around by causes.
Doing vs happening?
Doing = you act for a reason of your own. Happening = a cause acts on you, no reason of yours.
The two kinds of 'because'?
A cause pushes you (reflex/shove) vs a reason you hold guides you (goal/want) — only the second is an action.
Why is agency part of personhood?
It builds on self-awareness: a person is a doer who acts for reasons, not just a being things happen to.
The 'your reasons were caused' objection?
Your reasons came from upbringing and brain — so are you really free? A bridge to the freedom topic.
Does a self-driving car have agency?
Many say no — it follows programmed causes; the reasons aren't its own, held and understood by it.
The three layers of personhood so far?
Consciousness (feeling) → self-consciousness (knowing yourself) → agency (acting for your own reasons).
A reflex — action or event?
An event: it has a cause but no reason of your own, so it isn't an exercise of agency.
1.4.48 cards
What is moral responsibility?
Being fairly open to praise or blame for what you do — it needs you to have really done it, for your own reasons.
How is responsibility linked to agency?
You can only be responsible for what you actually DID as an agent; no agency, no fair blame.
Coercion (excuse)?
You were forced (e.g. threatened at knife-point) — the act wasn't your own free choice, so fair blame drops.
Inability (excuse)?
You couldn't have done otherwise — you didn't know, couldn't understand, or couldn't control it.
The rule for responsibility?
You're responsible when a free, informed agent who could have acted otherwise stood behind the act.
Kant on dignity?
Rational agents have priceless worth, so must be treated as ends in themselves, never mere tools.
Kant: 'end, not a mere means'?
Never use a person only as a tool for your goals — respect them as a rational agent with worth beyond price.
Objection to Kant tying worth to reason?
Humans who can't reason (infants, some illnesses) seem to lose dignity — Kantians patch this, but it's a real gap.
1.4.59 cards
Could a non-human be a person?
In principle yes, if personhood tracks abilities, feeling or community rather than species — the debate is whether animals/AI really have those.
Speciesism (Singer)?
Treating one species as more important simply because it's yours — a bias he compares to racism.
Singer on animals?
If the ability to feel earns moral status, ignoring an animal's suffering just for being non-human is speciesism.
Wiredu & Menkiti on personhood?
Personhood is earned and graded through community life, not automatic at birth — a matter of degree.
Personhood as a matter of degree?
You grow into being a person; a newborn is a full human but not yet a full person (Menkiti). Reframes animal/AI cases.
Western vs African view of personhood?
Western (Warren/Locke): abilities, roughly on/off, in the individual. African (Wiredu/Menkiti): earned, graded, in your relationships.
Why doubt an AI is a person?
It can behave like one — say 'I care' — with no inner feeling or real relationship behind it. Behaving ≠ being.
Behaving like a person vs being one?
The key gap: producing the outward marks (words, memory) isn't proof there's any inner life or real relationship there.
What lifts a Section A answer to the top band?
Exploring and weighing several views on the stimulus and reaching a reasoned conclusion — not describing.
Topic 1.4 study notes
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