Affiliation:
1. Syracuse University, USA
Abstract
Abstract
‘It feels like I have lost a part of myself’ is frequently uttered by those grieving the death of a loved one. Despite the ubiquity of such utterances, and the palpable sense that they express something true, few philosophers have considered what, if anything, accounts for their truth. Here, I develop a suggestion from Donald Baxter according to which Composition as Identity provides us a means to understand the grief utterances literally. In doing so, I identify and develop a version of Leibniz's Law required for Composition as Identity to account for the truth of the grief utterances. In turn, this principle helps shed light on Composition as Identity's central claim: that the parts are identical to the whole. By considering objections to the resulting view, I construct a list of desiderata for other philosophers interested in accounting for the grief utterances.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Reference21 articles.
1. ‘Identity in the Loose and Popular Sense’;Baxter;Mind,1988
2. ‘Many–One Identity’;Baxter;Philosophical Papers,1988
3. ‘Identity through Time and the Discernibility of Identicals’;Baxter;Analysis,1989
4. ‘Instantiation as Partial Identity’;Baxter;Australasian Journal of Philosophy,2001
5. ‘Altruism, Grief, and Identity’;Baxter;Philos Phenomenol Res,2005
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