But I don't really care about replicating the things that programmed me-- I just care about what they programmed me to care about.
Tangential public advisory: I suspect that it is a bad cached pattern to focus on the abstraction where it is memes and genes that created you rather than, say, your ecological-developmental history or your self two years ago or various plausibly ideal futures you would like to bring about &c. In the context of decision theory I'll sometimes talk about an agent inheriting the decision policy of its creator process which sometimes causes people to go "well I don't want what evolution wants, nyahhh" which invariably makes me facepalm repeatedly in despair.
Recently I summarized Joshua Greene's attempt to 'explain away' deontological ethics by revealing the cognitive algorithms that generate deontological judgments and showing that the causes of our deontological judgments are inconsistent with normative principles we would endorse.
Mark Alfano has recently done the same thing with virtue ethics (which generally requires a fairly robust theory of character trait possession) in his March 2011 article on the topic:
An overview of the 'situationist' attack on character trait possession can be found in Doris' book Lack of Character.