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Locke's Theory of Personal Identity
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 January 2009
Extract
It is widely held that Locke propounded a theory of personal identity in terms of consciousness and memory. By ‘theory’ here is meant a set of necessary and sufficient conditions indicating what personal identity consists in. It is also held that this theory is open to obvious and damaging objections, so much so that it has to be supplemented in terms of bodily continuity, either because memory alone is not sufficient, or because the concept of memory is itself dependent upon considerations of bodily continuity. Alternatively it has been suggested that Locke's theory could be modified by allowing that for the purposes of personal identity ‘remember’ should be regarded as a transitive relation. So if A remembers the experiences of B but not those of C, and B remembers the experiences of C, then A, B and C can be regarded as belonging to the same unit of consciousness.
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- Copyright © The Royal Institute of Philosophy 1979
References
1 By, for example, Flew, Antony, ‘Locke and the Problem of Personal Identity’ in Locke and Berkeley: A Collection of Critical Essays, Martin, C. B. and Armstrong, D. M. (eds) (Garden City, 1968)Google Scholar; Mackie, J. L., Problems from Locke (Oxford, 1976), Ch. 6CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Williams, Bernard, ‘Personal Identity and Individuation’ in Problems of the Self (Cambridge, 1973).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
2 On the development of this point see, for example, Penelhum, Terence, Survival and Disembodied Existence (London, 1970).Google Scholar
3 Mackie, , op. cit., 180.Google Scholar
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11 Like Mackie I think that it is necessary not to slur over the distinction between truth-conditions and evidence by the use of the term ‘criterion’ (Mackie, , op. cit., 185–186Google Scholar). By ‘criterion in the strong sense’ I mean ‘truth-conditions’.
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