Abstract
Derek Parfit's “reductionist” account of personal
identity (including the rejection of anything like a soul) is coupled with
the rejection of a commonsensical intuition of essential self-unity, as in
his defense of the counter-intuitive claim that “identity does not
matter.” His argument for this claim is based on reflection on the
possibility of personal fission. To the contrary, Simon Blackburn claims
that the “unity reaction” to fission has an absolute grip on
practical reasoning. Now David Lewis denied Parfit's claim that
reductionism contravenes common sense, so I revisit the debate between
Parfit and Lewis, showing why Parfit wins it. Is reductionism about
persons then inherently at odds with the unity reaction? Not necessarily;
David Velleman presents a reductionist theory according to which fission
does not conflict with the unity reaction. Nonetheless, relying on the
distinction between person level descriptions of first-person states and
the first-person perspective itself, I argue that Velleman's theory
does not eliminate fission-based conflict with the unity reaction.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
General Social Sciences,Philosophy
Cited by
5 articles.
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