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    If natural rights are grounded in functional capacities r... — Carmelics
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    Challenges→Creating post-humans would threaten the sufficiency of being human as a basis for claiming natural rights

    If natural rights are grounded in functional capacities rather than species membership, then being human is no longer sufficient to claim those rights

    BioethicsRights & Liberty
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    BioethicsRights & Liberty

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    Creating post-humans would threaten the sufficiency of being human as a basis fo...Discovering rational extraterrestrials would similarly undermine the sufficiency...Post-humans may be capable of claiming natural rights by virtue of their expande...

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    If natural rights are granted on the basis of functional capacities ra...93%Post-humans may be capable of claiming natural rights by virtue of the...87%Creating post-humans would threaten the sufficiency of being human as ...84%God endowed humans with natural rights84%

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    Other opponents of directed evolution extend the argument further. They acknowledge that post-humans may be capable of claiming the same natural rights as humans by virtue of their capacities, but argue that creating such a species would challenge the notion that being human is sufficient for claiming those rights, in the same ways that discovering rational extraterrestrials would. This, in turn, would potentially disenfranchise the humans, like infants or the mentally disabled, who cannot show

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