There's this hypothetical situation which gets thrown around quite a bit in discussions which goes like this:
You take a human being, and you replace their hand with a synthetic but otherwise completely functional robotic hand. Everyone agrees that that person is most definitely still a human being, albeit with a robotic hand. You then take both his arms and replace them with robotic equivalents, you could still say he's a human being.
You then escalate it to the point where you slowly replace everything in the entire body with a synthetic equivalent that is functionally exactly the same as it originally was. For example when you get to the brain you could hypothetically replace very small chunks of cells with manufactured ones.
The question is, at what point does that person stop being human being? Because by the end of the procedure they are completely artificial.
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Hmmm... I guess when their personality is gone.
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Cybermen,
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I suppose it is when there is absolutely no biological parts left. You could compare this with the axe or ship question. If you replace every piece of a boat, piece by piece, is it still the same boat it was when you started replacing everything? Or, if you replace the head of an axe one year, then replace the haft the next, is it still the same axe?
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If they're not human then they're not human, assuming you mean humans as in animals. They're just robots with the personality of a human.