
Publication details
Year: 2008
Pages: 385-404
Series: Synthese
Full citation:
, "Changing the subject", Synthese 162 (3), 2008, pp. 385-404.


Changing the subject
on the subject of subjectivity
pp. 385-404
in: Troy Catterson (ed), Personal identity, Synthese 162 (3), 2008.Abstract
In this paper I shall attempt to argue for the simple view of personal identity. I shall first argue that we often do have warrant for our beliefs that we exist as continuing subjects of experience, and that these beliefs are justified independently of any reductionist analysis of what it means to be a person. This has two important implications that are relevant to the ongoing debate concerning the number of persons that are in existence throughout any duration in time: (1) the lack of logically or metaphysically necessary and sufficient conditions for distinguishing one person from another should imply neither that there is only one person nor that personhood is not individuative; and (2) the lack of such universally applicable identity criteria should not imply that the term ‘person’ is a folk term with no real application. In other words, lack of reductionist analysis does not entail lack of existence.
Publication details
Year: 2008
Pages: 385-404
Series: Synthese
Full citation:
, "Changing the subject", Synthese 162 (3), 2008, pp. 385-404.