If you are talking about ‘uplift’ to human-like ability levels, this seems like a more remote prospect than feats like altering humans to produce superhuman intelligence.
Really, why? It’s easy to imagine breeding or genetically engineering animals to increase their intelligence, something we can’t easily do with humans.
The smartest animals, such as elephants, dolphins, and chimps, have long generation times, high expense, and some protection from experimentation. For animals with shorter generation times, one has more distance to travel, and while cool experiments are possible, their timescales still wind up being long. And we have much larger potential datasets for human genomes tagged with cognitive data (collected for medical and educational reasons, so not posing much marginal cost) than for other animals.
If you are talking about ‘uplift’ to human-like ability levels, this seems like a more remote prospect than feats like altering humans to produce superhuman intelligence.
Really, why? It’s easy to imagine breeding or genetically engineering animals to increase their intelligence, something we can’t easily do with humans.
The smartest animals, such as elephants, dolphins, and chimps, have long generation times, high expense, and some protection from experimentation. For animals with shorter generation times, one has more distance to travel, and while cool experiments are possible, their timescales still wind up being long. And we have much larger potential datasets for human genomes tagged with cognitive data (collected for medical and educational reasons, so not posing much marginal cost) than for other animals.
Also, you need a long lifespan to make use the really interesting high-intelligence stuff.