LOCKE ON PERSONAL IDENTITY (Part 1 of 2) Text source: Essay Concerning Human Understanding, bk. 2 ch. 27.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Subject-Matter of Ethics
Advertisements

REID Locke confused about Personal Identity. Thomas Reid ( ) Defender of Commonsense Realism.
LOCKE’S ATTACK ON INNATISM Text source: Essay Concerning Human Understanding, book 1, chapters 1-3.
Descartes’ cosmological argument
Personal Identity. CAUSAL EFFICACY OF CONTENT Breaking Glass o.
Locke on Persons [T]o find wherein personal Identity consists, we must consider what Person stands for; which, I think, is a thinking intelligent Being.
Kant’s Transcendental Idealism according to Henry E. Allison Itzel Gonzalez Phil 4191 March 2, 2009.
LOCKE ON SUBSTANCE (Part 1 of 2) Text source: Essay Concerning Human Understanding, bk. 2 ch. 23.
History of Philosophy Lecture 14 John Locke
Aristotle Virtue Ethics
Plato, Aristotle and Descartes on body and soul
David Hume ( )  Fame as a philosopher (for Treatise and Enquiry) followed fame as an historian (for A History of Britain)
David Hume’s “The Self” Andrew Rippel Intro to Philosophy 110, Russell Marcus.
Non-relative Virtues, An Aristotelian Approach
Personal Identity What makes each of us the same person over time?
PHL 201 March 18, 2004  Quiz #3 Answers  Next Quiz – Mar. 26 (new format)  Essay Assignments  Chapter Four – The Self  Faculty Course Surveys.
Animals introduction. definitions Something is a human iff it is a homo sapien. Something is a person iff it is a self- conscious, rational being (or.
Chapter 4 The Problem of Personal Identity
LOCKE ON SUBSTANCE (Part 2 of 2) Text source: Essay Concerning Human Understanding, bk. 2 ch. 23.
LOCKE 3: PERSONAL IDENTITY WHO YOU ARE IS DEFINED BY THE SCOPE OF YOUR CONSCIOUSNESS.
General Philosophy Dr Peter Millican, Hertford College Lecture 8: Personal Identity.
General Philosophy Dr Peter Millican, Hertford College Lecture 8: Personal Identity.
Concept innatism I Michael Lacewing
© Michael Lacewing Plato and Hume on Human Understanding Michael Lacewing
Philosophy A philosophy is a system of beliefs about reality.
The Mind-Brain Type Identity Theory
© Michael Lacewing Three theories of ethics Michael Lacewing
What is A Course in Miracles?. A spiritual path to remember our true identity as a perfect Creation of God. Christian in terms but its content is based.
An Essay Concerning Human Understanding John Locke.
Philosophy of Mind Week 3: Objections to Dualism Logical Behaviorism
Descartes I am essentially rational, only accidentally an animal ‘essentially’ = logically necessarily ‘essentially’ = logically necessarily Strictly speaking,
The Body and Soul Theory. For any persons, P1 and P2, and times T1 and T2 (T1≠T2), such that P1 exists at T1 and P2 exists at T2, P1 is the same person.
BERKELEY’S CASE FOR IDEALISM (Part 1 of 2) Text source: A Treatise Concerning the Principles of Human Knowledge, sectns. 1-21,
Persons, Minds and Brains
LOCKE ON PERSONAL IDENTITY (Part 2 of 2) Text source: Essay Concerning Human Understanding, bk. 2 ch. 27.
John Locke ( ) Influential both as a philosopher (Essay Concerning Human Understanding) and as a political thinker (Two Treatises on Government)
This week’s aims: To set clear expectations regarding homework, organisation, etc. To re-introduce the debate concerning the mind-body problem To analyse.
Identity. Identify of Objects  What a thing is, what makes it what it is, its properties  The problem  If an object really changes, there can't literally.
Substance dualism Michael Lacewing co.uk.
© Michael Lacewing Abortion and persons Michael Lacewing
LOCKE ON THE ORIGIN AND STRUCTURE OF IDEAS Text source: Essay Concerning Human Understanding, bk. 2, ch. 1-3, 5-7.
Descartes on the mind Michael Lacewing co.uk.
Conscience in the Teaching of the Church From the Pastoral Constitution of the Church in the Modern World -Gaudium et Spes.
Lawrence Kohlberg American Psychologist born in 1927 Follower of Jean Piaget’s Theory of Cognitive development Extended Piaget’s ideas into his own stages.
Philosophy 1050: Introduction to Philosophy Week 8: Augustine and Self-Consciousness.
Animals and Persons. Ethical status for animals Kantian and utilitarian ethics traditionally extended to all people, but only people Kant: all rational.
The Memory Theory. [C]onsciousness always accompanies thinking, and… in this alone consists personal identity… and as far as this consciousness can be.
The Mind And Body Problem Mr. DeZilva.  Humans are characterised by the body (physical) and the mind (consciousness) These are the fundamental properties.
LOCKE ON KNOWLEDGE OF THE EXTERNAL WORLD Text source: Essay Concerning Human Understanding, bk. 4, ch. 11; see also bk. 4, ch. 2, sec. 14.
Why Utility Pleases By: David Hakim. Main Conclusion of EPM5 Utility pleases us because it is constitutive of the virtues that promote the interests of.
An Outline of Descartes's Meditations on First Philosophy
The Problem of Personal Identity.  There are 4 responses to this question  Illusion theory  Body theory  Soul theory  Memory theory.
Lesson Objective Key Words Lesson outcomes Hypothetical Categorical Imperatives Freedom To evaluate the differences between the Hypothetical and Categorical.
AS Ethics Utilitarianism Title: - Preference Utilitarianism To begin… What is meant by preference? L/O: To understand Preference Utilitarianism.
Inglese Lezz Lez nov. 15 Continuiamo a leggere da Locke, ESSAY, BOOK II, CHAPTER XXVII. OF IDENTITY AND DIVERSITY.
Introduction to Logic Lecture 3 Formalizing an argument By David Kelsey.
The Problem of Personal Identity
General Philosophy Lecture 8: Personal Identity
Descartes’ conceivability argument for substance dualism
What is the relationship between body and soul.
Michael Lacewing Descartes on the mind Michael Lacewing
Plato and Hume on Human Understanding
Is the concept of substance innate?
Animalism.
Assignments For Tuesday, read Feinberg and Levenbook, ”Abortion” in the text. On Thursday, we will talk about Don Marquis, “Why Abortion is Immoral” and.
Personal Identity.
Michael Lacewing Descartes on the mind Michael Lacewing
Religious faith and emotion
General Philosophy Lecture 8: Personal Identity
Presentation transcript:

LOCKE ON PERSONAL IDENTITY (Part 1 of 2) Text source: Essay Concerning Human Understanding, bk. 2 ch. 27

INTRODUCING IDENTITY As we have seen, we think of the world as populated by properties (a.k.a. qualities) and the things that have properties. Moreover, we think of many of the things we encounter as relatively stable, enduring things. Many of things we encounter endure through time. We can encounter something and re-encounter it later on.

QUESTIONS THAT ARISE IN THINKING ABOUT IDENTIY  What makes something ‘one and the same thing’, enduring through time?  Can we state the conditions for a given thing A (at one time) to be one and the same thing as a given thing B (at a later time)?  What about synchronous identity (identity at a given moment)? These 3 questions all ask us to provide a ‘principle of individuation’: a rule or criterion for determining questions of identity.

HERE OUR CONCERN IS WITH NUMERICAL IDENTITY, NOT QUALITATIVE IDENTITY Don’t confuse questions of numerical identity with questions of qualitative identity.  Numerical identity: where we have one and the same thing.  Qualitative identity: where we have two or more qualitatively indistinguishable things, like perfect twins. Note that you can have numerical ID without qualitative ID, and vice versa. They are completely different.

PERSONAL IDENTITY: THE ISSUE Locke is particularly interested in the particular problem of identity of persons across time, since… (1) We need to understand what personal identity consists in to properly understand what exactly a person is. (2) We need an account of this sort of identity to evaluate questions of moral responsibility and just reward and punishment. (3) We need an account of this sort of identity to assess claims about an afterlife beyond bodily death, resurrection, reincarnation, body-swapping thought experiments etc.

LOCKE ON IDENTITY IN GENERAL Locke says it makes no sense to bluntly ask the question “Is X the same as Y?” This is not a well-formed question.  Instead we must ask “Is X the same F as Y?”, where F picks out a sortal: a general concept that picks out the type or sort of thing we’re talking about. E.g. “Is X the same lump of matter as Y?” “Is X the same horse as Y?” “Is X the same car as Y?” “Is X the same person as Y?”  Depending on which sortal category you deploy, you may well get a different answer. The principle of individuation may well be different for different sortal categories.

LOCKE ON PERSONAL IDENTITY What then does Locke mean by the sortal concept ‘person’?  First, note that he distinguishes ‘man’ ( = the organism or functioning body) from ‘person’ (which he also sometimes calls ‘self’). (ECHU , , )  For Locke, ‘person’ specifies an intelligent, thinking being that is conscious of itself as itself across time (2.27.9, ).  It is bound up with a first-person point of view or awareness (a ‘consciousness’). Locke says what you are right now (qua person) is a certain stretch of self-aware consciousness, made up of thoughts, sensations, emotions, memories, intentions etc…

“WHAT PERSON STANDS FOR” “[T]o find wherein personal identity consists, we must consider what person stands for;--which, I think, is a thinking intelligent being, that has reason and reflection, and can consider itself as itself, the same thinking thing, in different times and places; which it does only by that consciousness which is inseparable from thinking, and, as it seems to me, essential to it” (ECHU ) “Self is that conscious thinking thing,--whatever substances made up of, (whether spiritual or material, simple or compounded, it matters not)—which is sensible of conscious of pleasure and pain, capable of happiness or misery, and is so far concerned for itself, as far as that consciousness extends” (ECHU )

“PERSON IS A FORENSIC TERM”  So for Locke, ‘person’ specifies an intelligent, thinking being that is conscious of itself as itself across time (2.27.9, ).  It is tied up with expectations (what should you hope for, anticipate, fear) and memories. (2.27.9, )  It is also tied up with moral responsibility (what acts you should feel shame, remorse, or pride for) and just punishments and rewards (what acts you should be justly be rewarded or punished for). ( , ) As Locke puts it, “person is a forensic term [i.e. having to do with courts of law] appropriating actions and their merit; and so belongs only intelligent agents capable of law, and happiness and misery.” ( )

LOCKE’S CRITERION OF PERSONAL IDENTIY: CONTINUITY OF CONSCIOUSNESS With persons (“Is X the same person as Y?”), Locke says that what is required is continuity of consciousness. (ECHU , , , ) What you are (qua person) in the course of your life is a series of stretches of consciousness, connected through memory.

LOCKE: “CONSCIOUSNESS MAKES PERSONAL IDENTITY” “[S]ince consciousness always accompanies thinking, and it is that which makes everyone to be that which he calls self, and thereby distinguishes himself from other thinking things, in this alone consists personal identity, i.e. the sameness of a rational being; and as far as this consciousness can be extended backwards to any past action or thought, so far reaches the identity of that person; it is the same self now it was then.” (ECHU ) “[I]t being the same consciousness that personal identity depends on that only … For as far as any intelligent being can repeat the idea of any past action with the same consciousness it had of it at first, and with the same consciousness it has of any present action; so far it is the same personal self.” (ECHU )