Possible solution to the personal identity problem
Hello all,
First I will state the problem raised in Daniel Dennetts piece on personal identity. He basically asks what makes a person the same person? He then gives a thought experiment to show this where a man has his brain put in a vat but it is still connected, so his body is moving with out the brain in it. Then he pushes it further by copying the mans consciousness onto a computer and then downloads it into another person.
My solution to this problem is that the two people with the exact same consciousness are the same thing but of a different kind. Basically it is like you just in a different timeline, so imagine that your life is a time line, at the moment of the split that line would split into two lines which would constitute "you" going through two different lives from that point. So it is you, except you are going through a different life experience than the other you. So, it would just be a different you, not in the sense of function, but in the sense of experiences, where one you would think one way going through one set of experiences, and the other would think in the exact same way (functionally not content wise), but having began to lead a different life with different experiences.
what do you all think of this?
First I will state the problem raised in Daniel Dennetts piece on personal identity. He basically asks what makes a person the same person? He then gives a thought experiment to show this where a man has his brain put in a vat but it is still connected, so his body is moving with out the brain in it. Then he pushes it further by copying the mans consciousness onto a computer and then downloads it into another person.
My solution to this problem is that the two people with the exact same consciousness are the same thing but of a different kind. Basically it is like you just in a different timeline, so imagine that your life is a time line, at the moment of the split that line would split into two lines which would constitute "you" going through two different lives from that point. So it is you, except you are going through a different life experience than the other you. So, it would just be a different you, not in the sense of function, but in the sense of experiences, where one you would think one way going through one set of experiences, and the other would think in the exact same way (functionally not content wise), but having began to lead a different life with different experiences.
what do you all think of this?
Comments (41)
Quoting LexaThe moment the consciousness changes mediums, from biological to electronic, it is no longer the same consciousness. What you upload to another person will not be what was in the original. Plus, each body's chemistry is different. And our personalities are strongly influenced by things like hormones and neurotransmitters.
Quoting LexaEven if not for the chemical differences, they would be different people. Just as identical twins are. How we think is influenced by our experiences. Different experiences means different ways of thinking.
I think the least problematic answer to these type of thought experiments is that the object goes where the parts go, and only where the parts go. However if consciousness is not an object, it is more difficult.
I think we need our bodies to experience life and that every cell in our body is part of our consciousness, so if our consciousness were transferred to a different body we would have a problem identifying that different body as who we are.
There are several fun movies about people whiching bodies. In one such movie a grandfather and grandson trade bodies. In another a mother and daughter trade bodies. I think there are a couple where and man and woman trade bodies. However, my reply also comes from what I have read and experience. We know who we are by checking in with our bodies that hold our memories.
Ah, a brain in a vat would not get essential information without a body. What are you without a body? What is your body without a brain? People with Alzheimer's Disease have a sense of who they are but they may not remember anyone around them. They are not exactly in the here and now, but often in the past.
The government solves it by issuing a unique personal identification document to every person.
It's how we are formally forced to maintain a personal identity, in real terms.
Indeed - enactivism and embodied cognition.
Regarding the nature of the self, the enactivist approach, as I understand it, implies a view of the self as dynamically emerging from the ongoing interactions between an organism, its body, and the environment. The self is not considered as a static entity or an isolated internal entity, but rather as a process that is continually shaped by the activities and relationships of the organism.
We are pre-conditioned genetically and then further conditioned by our environments.
In a meditative state some time back I shifted to another personality briefly. It's an experience ineffable and lasting.
I take you to be speaking about social identity, and not numerical identy.
From my understanding the identity problem is one of what makes you 'actually' you across time - not your subjective identification, which you're right to point out is a constantly changing chimera of various elements in various ratios.
But how you are yourself (i.e, the person who is you - not the person you think you are) across time is entirely askance from your subjective understanding of yourself.
I believe you're referring to what Parfit thinks 'matters' after deciding there's no such thing as personal identity. Which is to say, the psychological continuity is what matters, and that your actual identity (i.e the state of being identical with oneself) isn't important.
I take that to be somewhat a way to comfort himself after realizing we may not actually 'be' any 'one'. Which is daunting to some degree, i feel.
Does this entail that there are multiple persons? Or multiple personal facades?
I still think you are seriously misapprehending what personal identity is in this context (the thought experiments). Ive actually found the wiki page prettt darn good at explaining this concept https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personal_identity
Its a fascinating set of questions that theoretically should have an empirical answer once we figure out the necessary and sufficients
If you have a look on that page under characterisation it makes the specific delineation Im trying to illustrate - outside of philosophy personal identity is taken to be sets of properties to which we adhere and present to the world as a self-image.
Thats not wha philosophical personal identity deals with. Its much more abstract and they can roll together in the following:
If you take the psychological theory of identity serriously this can include the phenomenological conception of self one carries over time - but that doesnt indicate the self - it is, in fact, the mental continuity of the conception over time (ie you can singularly recall yourself at times in the past despite differences to the present you doing the recalling) which would by these lights establish a you. The self image does not due to its instability.
But it will also include many many other things such as your relations to others, bodily facts that you know etc
Agin, really interesting area that goes far beyond a self-image deliberation
:)
I dont know that this is going to be a fruitful exchange because Im seeing some talking past each other happening from each of us a bit. I shall try to give a fairly complete response to avoid further convolution
Again youve identified a different problem - which is what constitutes the type which the human consists in. The issues discussed in both sources (but admittedly, while more succinct, the wiki page is far more cursory) are about what makes a single one the same token of whatever type (which seems to be the issue youre identifying) across time. This isnt dealt with other than orthogonally in the direction youre going from what I can see.
Those problems Ive outlined havent been addressed by either your personal comments or the discussion of other sources. It may be that youre resistant to an analytic use of the term identity which I recognise is sort of a choice on my part - and Id also note that Ive outlined how and where your concern is totally legitimate and that even your comments strike me as correct / but it doesnt address the crux lets say of what I understand the questions of personal identity to really traverse in this philosophical context.
I understand finding certain views that comport with your intuitions - thats what drew me to philosophy generally. But Im unsure thats a sufficient basis to say that the topic at hand isnt the traditional philosophical topic and something more constructivist.
Given its entirely possible Im wrong: If that isnt true, or at the very least Im necessarily misunderstanding you - fsir enough. Id just then roll back most of the exchange and say oh, all right. Im most interested in *insert the issues Ive outlined* within this arena and try to go forward from there
Glad to see you posting again on the forum, mate. What you posted is interesting. I searched for what heuristic means, and the dictionary says: a method of learning or solving problems that allows people to discover things themselves and learn from their own experiences
Thank you so much for quoting this concept because I wasn't aware of its existence until this morning. There is a big debate about the legislation in my country about transgender people. They now have the right to switch their gender and name more freely. Ignoring all the arguments which are against them because of conservative ideologies, I want to highlight the heuristic argument.
Frankly, they say they feel like a 'woman' or a 'man' because this is what they feel. But how can this happen at all? According to heuristics, I learn by experience. So, how can I experience being a woman? Only if the transaction of souls exists. Another point that shows that transgender is a political debate and not a philosophical one.
Hey Javi!
Thanks for pointing out the definition, actually. I'm a computer guy, and I've always presumed the computing definition was the predominant one:
proceeding to a solution by trial and error or by rules that are only loosely defined.
Which captures what I was trying to say. Communication is hard!
Quoting javi2541997
Don't take it too seriously. Of course we learn by experience, but "heurisitics" is not some sweeping philosophical claim that everything can only be known by experience. We have innate capabilities, feelings, and perhaps identifications as well.
BTW, the next writing contest is opening up soon, keep an eye out! Hope to see you there.
I dont think identifying as a man or a woman means much of anything. Id say i agree with your general point
Well, you could consider phenomenological personalism, in which "persons" and thus "personal identity," are ontologically basic.
Of course, you could consider that this is just a cheap move. Making something a "brute fact," doesn't exactly explain it. However, I think there is something to the idea that "we are all persons," and that we only experience things "as persons," which does seem to leave some grounds for claiming that personhood is at least phenomenologically basic. But there does also seem to be grounds for dismissing this as mere illusion.
TBH, I've only dabbled in this set of ideas so I probably couldn't make a very good case for it. I find it interesting though.
Especially since it is explicable why such an illusion might arise and persist.
Personhood is embedded in language, with such words as "I", "you", "person", "self", and special words which single each of us out individually. Since we largely think in language, personhood is imbued in our thinking.
We are discrete physical bodies in the world, with narrative histories built upon memories.
Sensory data is translated (somehow) to the phenomenal arena of perceptions, where a central brain area operates processes in those terms. Moreover, the phenomenological reality of this central brain area is divided into external and internal realms, the latter consisting of feelings, bodily sensations, and thoughts (typically expressed as internal sounds and images). This schism between inside and outside sensations is the division between self and world.
All this powerfully contributes to the notion that the self is somehow ontologically fundamental. Yet, experience brain injury or indulge in various intoxicants and you will see first hand how fragile this sense of self really is.
True, although this seems like a partial explanation at best. We'd then need to explain "why" human language is like this. The advocate of personalism has a ready made answer because language is developed and used by persons. Why else should diverse codes for storing and transmitting information all center around an "I" and "we."
Likewise, drugs sort of provide support in both directions. On the one hand, persons seem less than basic if they can be disrupted. On the other, you have the fact that persons seem to reconstitute themselves despite disruptions, so they aren't easily dispelled like many illusions, but remarkably robust. Plus, people with NDEs and drug experiences of "ego death" still tend to describe these experiences as "theirs," which gets back to language.
Personalism seems to work pretty well with modern epistemology (unlike metaphysics). When it comes to discussions of what is known, instead of what "is," it seems like persons tend to be accepted as the fundemental "knowers." We don't talk of words "knowing" their meanings or books knowing their contents. "Knowing" then seems to presuppose a sort of personage, as opposed to the mere encoding of information.
And your example is perfect - a word doesn't 'know' its meaning, or even 'misunderstan' it's meaning - a person does (or some lower form of consciousness such as Elephants or Dogs). We can even posit that 'more than one person' knows a particular thing, and it is, short of speculation about honesty or really strong pan-psychism, not easy (or possible?) to defeat the idea that a piece of information can be known within 'more than one person'. The fact of interpersonal misinterpretation might bolster that. This could boil down to 'mind' rather than person - and there we're at a loss again since mind is so ill-defined.
This is only one avenue i sometimes venture down from that starting gating...
Have you any/many thoughts around that?
I've been interested in how people find drugs affect personhood ever since finding out some people truly believe a loss of consciousness constitutes death.
Is that reconstitution a rebirth? Or is that a new person, marginally different, from the one who existed before the break in consciousness (or even just conscious state)?
Jason Werberloff doesn't drink because he believes he would die through the process of becoming drunk, and a new person born, through the process of becoming sober. I don't take that line, but i find it very interesting.
At least that's my interpretation of the premise.
As someone who has been drunk more times than I can remember, I have (by that logic) therefore been reborn many thousands of times. All I can say is that I feel no different to my former incarnations - I look the same, I have the same preferences and disposition and memories, pets always seemed to recognise me and no one has noticed an iota of difference. How does one determine when one has actually been reborn? :wink:
Short answer: they don't, they are just stoned.
How would blacking out be different from sleeping?
I am sorry I have no understanding of your opinion that the premise maintains a body/brain connection. I am left with the impression that the argument lacks awareness of what the body has to do with awareness of one's self.
The op says:Quoting LexaThe brain is still connected. I take it that the reason the body is still moving is because the brain is still receiving and sending with the body, as though still in its natural state. But I may be misinterpreting. Difficulty ti know.
Difficult to conceive, but a wonderful opening for further consideration. How about Socrates and the cave? Just how much can the bodies move and experience life? Can these bodies give each other pleasure or cause each other emotional pain? Can they experience the thrill of discovery or the satisfaction of saving a life? What in the world can give these bodies meaningful lives? Like a dead frog twitches when given an electrical shock but is that equal to living? Of what can that brain be conscious?
As I say, I cannot remember how he parses the different states.
An off-the-cuff note, would be that when 'blacked out' memories are not created, and you are not consciously aware. You can do both while sleeping (dreaming and lucid dreaming, particularly).
@Tom Storm
If you check episode below ("Does Tuvix Deserve To Die?"
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That was the main topic of my first thread.
I don't buy it either, ftr.
Parfit has a reductionist account which concludes there is no persistent self, but what matters to morality is psychological continuity only. Hence, Jason's rather bleak and stringent account of death
That much I can agree with.
From DeepAI (which i've just, in the last 12 hours, started using):
""Reasons and Persons" is a seminal work by philosopher Derek Parfit, exploring ethical theories and the concept of personal identity. Parfit examines how different ethical theories, such as consequentialism and deontology, provide reasons for action and their implications for personal identity. He explores the relevance of these theories to moral choices and the nature of self-interest. Parfit argues for a reductionist view of personal identity, suggesting that psychological continuity and connectedness are more significant than a fixed identity over time. Overall, the book delves into the complex relationship between ethical theories, personal identity, and rational decision-making."
The non-identity problem stems from his work:
"The non-identity problem questions whether there can be harm done to a person by causing their existence to be different, when their alternative existence might include certain advantages. It raises ethical and philosophical questions about how we understand harm and the nature of personal identity."