The problem of personal identity is the question about how we define a person. In other words, what makes me me? How do we decide if there is some person who is the same person as me? Locke answers this problem by saying that personal identity consists of autobiographical memories. Reid shows that this theory will violate the transitivity of identity. Parfit's contribution to the literature on the problem of personal identity is to note that strict numerical identity might not be the appropriate concept. Rather, he talks about survival. The question of whether you survive is the same question as whether there is some person who is you. In the links below, I discuss the difference between identity and survival in more detail.
Parfit on PID.
Identity vs. Survival.
Showing posts with label personal identity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label personal identity. Show all posts
Wednesday, February 5, 2014
Tuesday, September 10, 2013
Pfizz #1 and Answers
1. What is the problem
of personal identity?
How
can we say that I am the same person now as I was when I was younger?
What does it mean to be a person?
2. What is Locke's solution
to the problem of personal identity?
Locke says that the
identity of a person is constituted by conscious awareness of
autobiographical memories. You are whoever you remember being and
whatever you remember doing.
3. Explain the brave officer
example and how it proves Locke wrong.
A person, P, may remember
an event, A, during the time of another event, B. During event C, he
remembers event B but not event A. If memory constitutes personal
identity, then A = B and B = C (since at B he remembers A and at C he remembers B). By the law of transitivity of
identity, C should be identical to A. Yet this would violate Locke's
criterion for personal identity, because at C, he does not remember A.
4. How did Parfit clarify
the problem of personal identity?
Parfit clarifies that
theories about what a person is that lead to a violation of the
transitivity of identity are not bad simply because they violate the
transitivity of identity. Parfit says that when we talk about a
person being the same as me, we're not talking about strict numerical
identity. Rather, we're talking about something else: survival.
Survival requires neither a 1:1 ratio nor an all-or-nothing
categorization.
How Secure Are Memories?
Here is a link to the video from class where Derren Brown convinces Simon Pegg that he's always wanted a red BMX bike (with an explanation afterwards!).
This clip seems to indicate a problem with relying too heavily on memories to serve as a criterion of personal identity. If our memories can be changed, then how can I say that I am my memory?
This video also raises some questions about moral responsibility. If we can be controlled by other people, are we responsible for our actions?
Here is the link to Derren Brown's The Experiments: The Assassin. In this video, you see Derren Brown attempt to brainwash and hypnotize someone into being a sleeper assassin.
In another video, Derren Brown's The Experiments: Guilt Trip, Derren tries to convince an innocent man that he is guilty of a murder that never happened. This video raises concerns about the reliability of memory and questions about moral responsibility and its relationship to feelings of guilt.
This clip seems to indicate a problem with relying too heavily on memories to serve as a criterion of personal identity. If our memories can be changed, then how can I say that I am my memory?
This video also raises some questions about moral responsibility. If we can be controlled by other people, are we responsible for our actions?
Here is the link to Derren Brown's The Experiments: The Assassin. In this video, you see Derren Brown attempt to brainwash and hypnotize someone into being a sleeper assassin.

Monday, September 9, 2013
Parfit: Identity vs. Survival
Parfit attempts to clarify debates about personal identity by introducing a distinction between identity and survival. Although traditional theories about what a person is focus on identity, Parfit says that concerns about being the same person as myself are actually concerns about survival.
Follow this link to read another blog post where I discuss this distinction in some detail.
This is another link to a blog post about the contrast between Locke and Parfit
Follow this link to read another blog post where I discuss this distinction in some detail.
This is another link to a blog post about the contrast between Locke and Parfit
Tuesday, August 27, 2013
Identity, Locke and Objections
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.
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.
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

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.

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