In many myths concerning the origin of humanity, there's a recurring motif where deities create the first ancestors of mankind in their own image, using clay. Setting aside the theological debates and entanglements, this act of humans creating dolls in their own image might well be a projected reflection of their own behaviors.
No matter how it's viewed, a body of flesh and blood and a replica made from cloth and cotton are not the same, nor can life formed from clay be equated with an omnipotent and omniscient existence.
Dolls cannot become humans, and humans cannot become gods.
From the perspective of ethics, religion, philosophy, or law—these are unbreachable absolutes.