Identity can be expressed in a few different formulas. The reflexivity of identity can be exprssed with "A = A". In regular language, a thing is the same with itself. The symmetry of identity is expressed as "If A = B, then B = A". Meaning that if what you thought were two things are actually identical, then they must be exactly the same in every regard. The transitivity of identity can be expressed as "If A = B and B = C, then A = C." In other words, if one thing is identical to two things, then those other two things must also be identical to each other.
A famous objection to Locke comes from a violation of the third expression of identity. In this blog post, I discuss Thomas Reid's objections to Locke, including the one that is based on a violation of the transitivity of identity.
Tuesday, August 27, 2013
Monday, August 26, 2013
Tabula Rasa: Some Context for Locke
To provide some context for Locke's theory of personal identity, it may help to know what he thought about out minds and how they work. Locke thought that everyone is born with a 'blank slate' for a mind. This means that our minds are empty when we are born. Every experience and perception creates an impression on the mind, leaving behind information and memories. So you can see, if our minds (finite mental substances, i.e. souls) are empty without any memories, it makes sense then that awareness of memories is what makes personal identity.
Thursday, August 22, 2013
More Personal Identity in Hip Hop
In this track, Dessa describes an experience where she had a hard time recognizing her friend as the person that she had always known him to be. She struggles with the question of whether the person she interacts with is the same person who has been her friend for years. When she questions whether she is really speaking with "The Man I Knew", what kind of changes make her question his identity? What does this indicate about what she thinks are criteria for personal identity?
Wednesday, August 21, 2013
Different Thing, Different Criterion for Identity
In Locke's An Essay Concerning Human Understanding, Locke contrasts human personal identity with identity of different kinds of things. He begins with a general principle of identity: something is identical only to itself, and it is impossible for two things to exist in the same place at the same time. From this, we get a criterion for the identity of bodies, or physical objects. Physical objects stay the same so long as they stay the same combination of atoms. When something (mass, atoms, substance) is added to or removed from a physical body, then that body changes and is no longer identical to a past version of itself. Bodies are identical to themselves insofar as they continue to be the same collection of atoms. Locke notes that this criterion does not apply to living things like plants. An oak tree begins as an acorn, grows into a tree and may eventually be cut down. We say it is the same oak tree even though the atoms and particles that make up that oak tree have changed. Then what is the criterion for the personal identity of a tree? Well, the atoms of the tree may change over time, but the tree maintains an organization of its parts. The tree's parts are organized in a way to contribute to its nourishment and to the continuation of its life. Simply put, plants are organized living bodies. So long as a tree maintains this organization throughout the course of its life, then it is the same tree (even though the atoms that compose the tree have changed many times). Animals, brutes (yes, this is a racist term applied to non-European, non-"civilized" humans) and machines are all like plants insofar as they are all bodies that are organized for a certain end (goal). In animals and brutes, we can see the movement that results from their organizing processes; in plants we cannot. Machines differ from animals and brutes insofar as machines move only when acted upon by external forces. Animals, however, are the source of their own motion. Still, none of these distinctions has yet clarified the criterion for personal identity of humans; that's because that what makes a person identical to himself or herself is something different and unique to human beings: a soul. Specifically, Locke understands 'soul' to refer to our conscious awareness of our thoughts, experiences, perceptions and actions. Human personal identity depends on our awareness of past events in our lives. Our identity is made up of the things we remember thinking and doing.
Personal Identity and P.O.S.
This track from P.O.S., "De la Souls" is his take on his own personal identity. He seems to conceive of his own personal identity as a kind of narrative he tells about his own life. In other words, personal identity for him is made up of the kind of stories we tell about ourselves and how these stories shape who we are.
Locke on Personal Identity
What is personal identity? Generally speaking, personal identity is what makes a person the same person throughout his or her life.
Locke provides a psychological criterion for personal identity. Specifically, he thinks that your personal identity is constituted by your awareness of memories. Your personal identity extends as far back as your memories go back. Insofar as you are aware of a memory in your past, it is part of your identity.
So, If Arnold Schwarzenegger, former Governor of CA, remembers being in The Terminator, winning the Mr. Universe competition and growing up as a young boy in Thal, Graz, Austria, then he is the same person. If, however, he does not remember being a young boy in Thal who slept in a tiny bed and used a pit toilet, then those experiences are no longer part of his personal identity.
Indeed, if we take awareness of memories to be constitutive of personal identity, then anything we forget is no longer part of our personal identity.
Locke provides a psychological criterion for personal identity. Specifically, he thinks that your personal identity is constituted by your awareness of memories. Your personal identity extends as far back as your memories go back. Insofar as you are aware of a memory in your past, it is part of your identity.
So, If Arnold Schwarzenegger, former Governor of CA, remembers being in The Terminator, winning the Mr. Universe competition and growing up as a young boy in Thal, Graz, Austria, then he is the same person. If, however, he does not remember being a young boy in Thal who slept in a tiny bed and used a pit toilet, then those experiences are no longer part of his personal identity.
Indeed, if we take awareness of memories to be constitutive of personal identity, then anything we forget is no longer part of our personal identity.
Monday, August 19, 2013
Hello and Welcome
This blog is an informal venue where I will post connections to other material, comments on readings and some clarifications for your benefit. Whereas the blackboard site includes official course information, this site is designed to engage with intellectual curiosity in a playful, fun way. Content will be updated for each new author. Enjoy! -Louise
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