>Man for plot reasons has to create a new body to transfer his Soul/Mind/Consciousness because otherwise he will die. He only has enough resources to make one substitute body for himself, and time is short. He only has this one chance to survive. He can not survive permanently in the Soul form.
>Substitute body that was created develops it's own sense of self and does not want to be possessed by previously mentioned Man's as the substitute can not survive the event.
Who ultimately has the moral right to the body?
I'd say the substitute because it's like a child, though it could be argued it's different as the substitute was explicitly made for the purpose so the subtitutes body is technically the mans property and the substitutes mind is just an intruder.
&Humanities was a mistake
>>2941516
This is an interesting question and will have to be answered anyways in the future when AI and/or mind uploading becomes possible.
The Gestalt has no more claim to the Replicant's body than a father does to that of his child. You can also make a child for a specific purpose, but that does not allow you authority over the child's will other than for the purposes of raising it.
>>2941516
This
>>2941516
this