Will a non-homo spaiens species be legally recognized as a person by the USA or EU based on an increase in cognitive ability from it's natural baseline before the end of 2075?
@lu I am refering to biological species; however, if all a lot of sentient life is uploaded, and we upgrade uploaded animals, this will probably resolve YES. That will be a judgement call on my part, so if you want more info on my thoughts, let me know.
@MartinRandall Good question. It certainly does not have to be the entire species, but I was assuming a breeding population -- something worthy of the name Canis lupus sapiens, for example. However, I think that even one individual should technically count, as long as it is legally recognized as person, can be claimed to be largely or wholly a member of the base species, and could reasonably be recognized as a biological holotype of a new species or subspecies, without the need for a de facto breeding population or minimum population size. However, as a holotype, the legal definition of personhood should apply to all hypothetical members of this species (or subspecies). E.g., if all uberdolphins are assumed to be persons upon their creation/birth, this resolves YES (even if this is established with only one uberdolphin in existence), but if uberdolphins are only persons after passing a personhood test and there is no legal requirement to test a new uberdolphin, allowing one to continue treating it as a non-person, that would not yet be a YES.