You should see George Carlin's dissection of The 10 Commandments. He very convincingly debunks at least 6 or 7. Any commandment dealing with religious observance (remember the Sabbath, etc etc)is self-referential and therefore paradoxical and ultimately invalid. When you come down to it, "Thow shalt not steal" is the only one you really need - but even that one should be seen as a heads-up or a tip, not a commandment. If stealing a piece of moldy bread could save a person's life - should the life not be saved? Yeah, I'm sure you put a lot of stock in the 10 Commandments and all that, but you gots to put stuff in perspective!
Anyway - those above that stated that today's computers "think" in an all or none way, are right. But the so-called "quantum computer" (which I believe was first proposed by the great Richard Feynman), and which was referred to in the movie - in the form of the "quantum brain" (or some such) that made the Pilgrim Robots possible in the first place, may not work on a 0-1 binary architecture, in fact it almost does not, and therefore these AI Pilgrims may be capable of conceiving of a middle ground - where both a bacterium and a human are life forms but come on - a bacterium is just a germ, a grub is just a worm, but a human is a man or woman. A quantum brain with AI on the order of the Clocksmith or Cleo could probably make that distinction.
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