Title: PHILOSOPHY 100 Ted Stolze
1PHILOSOPHY 100 (Ted Stolze)
Notes on James Rachels, Problems Philosophy
2Chapter Five The Problem of Personal Identity
3What is a Thought Experiment?
- A thought experiment is an imaginary scenario
thats used to help concentrate the mind on
certain key factors in . . . reasoning. The
basic principles of thought experiments are the
same as those for actual scientific experiments
isolate the variables to be tested see how
individually altering these factors effects the
result the draw general conclusions about the
significance of these variables. In contrast
with scientific experiments, of course, the
significance of thought experiments in . . .
philosophy will be philosophical . . . rather
than physical. - (From Julian Baggini and Peter S. Fosl, The
Ethics Toolkit A Compendium of Ethical Concepts
and Methods Malden, MA Blackwell, 2007, p.
199.)
4The Duplicator Thought Experiment
5Two Aspects of Personhood
6Two Theories of Personhood at a Moment
- The Soul Theory
- The Bundle Theory
7The Soul Theory
- Within each person is a kernel that may be
called the soul or the ego or the self. It is
the subject of all the persons experiences. It
is simple and indivisible. And it is present
throughout the persons life (p. 57).
8The Bundle Theory
The parade of mental items is all that
exists, as far as the mind is concerned (p.
57).
9Split Brains and the Bundle Theory
10Two Senses of Personhood over Time
11Two Theories of Personal Identity over Time
- Same-Body (Same-Brain)
- Same-Memory (Memory-Links)
12The Same-Body Theory
X, who exists at an earlier time, and Y, who
exists at a later time, are the same person
(numerically) if and only if they have the same
body (p. 61).
13Objections to the Same-Body Theory
- The Prince and the Cobbler thought experiment
- Variations involving gender, age, species, etc.
- The Ship of Theseus thought experiment
14The Same-Brain Theory
- X, who exists at an earlier time, and Y, who
exists at a later time, are the same person
(numerically) if and only if they have the same
brain (p. 63).
15The Memory Theory
X, who lived at an earlier time, is the same
person (numerically) as Y, who lives at a later
time, if and only if Y can remember doing what
X did, feeling what X felt, thinking what X
thought, and so on (p. 60).
16An Objection to the Memory Theory
17The Memory-Links Theory
- X, who lived at an earlier time, is the same
person (numerically) as Y, who lives at a later
time, if and only if a chain of memories links X
and Y (p. 60)
18Memory and Responsibility
19Another Objection to the Memory (and
Memory-Links) Theory
- Apparent vs. real memories