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29.4: Personal Identity

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    95305
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    Some of the same issues we found with the debate concerning free will resurface when we consider the question of whether our personal identity endures over time. Do we remain the same person from birth until death? Is it something less than that, but still mostly that we are the same person? While there are plenty of arguments for various positions on personal identity, most people can’t shake the feeling that they are the same person over time. Some philosophers, like John Locke, even appeal to our ability to remember past actions as important evidence of the belief that we are the same person over time. We learned in this course, though, that memory is pretty unreliable. Whether or not we remember something often has to do with whether the right context or state dependent retrieval cues are present. Even when we do remember something, we need to be mindful of elaboration and revision. We also know that some of our most powerful memories – flashbulb memories – are no more likely to be true just because they are vivid. So, it is entirely possible we can have strong memories of having experienced something that simply didn’t happen.

    Others like to appeal to consistency of personality traits (beliefs, desires and temperaments) to justify a belief in identity permanence. Unfortunately, we have also discovered that we often overstate the degree to which these features stay consistent over time. The Markus study of attitudes discussed in Chapter 7 showed that over long periods of time people often remember their views as having been consistent, even when they have changed. We have also discovered that problematic thinking, like the hindsight bias, can lead us to believe that we always had certain expectations (when that isn’t true).

    And, once again, we can see the either/or fallacy rearing its head. While this debate is typically framed in terms of identity relationships (requiring two objects or beings to be exactly the same in order for them to be the same thing over time), Derek Parfit has argued that we should instead be thinking in terms of continuity, asking how similar we are over time, are rather than focusing on mere identity.


    This page titled 29.4: Personal Identity is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Jason Southworth & Chris Swoyer via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.

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