PERSONAL IDENTITY AND THE PSYCHOLOGICAL CONTINUITY THEORY Cover Image

LIČNI IDENTITET I TEORIJA PSIHOLOŠKOG KONTINUITETA
PERSONAL IDENTITY AND THE PSYCHOLOGICAL CONTINUITY THEORY

Author(s): Mirjana Sokić
Subject(s): Philosophy of Mind, Individual Psychology, Cognitive Psychology, Personality Psychology, Psychology of Self
Published by: Filozofsko društvo Srbije
Keywords: personal identity; psychological continuity theory; person; fetus; animalism;

Summary/Abstract: According to the psychological continuity theory – which is one of the most popular philosophical approaches to the problem of personal identity –some sort of psychological relation represents the necessary (although, perhaps not the sufficient) criterion of a person’s persistence through time. The main aim of this paper is to provide a detailed critical analysis of two well-known arguments against the psychological continuity theory, both of which heavily rely on the animalist view on personal identity; that is to say, on the view according to which the essential property of persons is that they are biological organisms. The first argument purports to refute the psychological continuity theory by appealing to the fact that all persons are numerically identical to fetuses and that it is utterly implausible to attribute psychological properties or capacities to fetuses. The second argument attempts to show that every person is numerically identical to the biological organism that remains after its death and which does not have any psychological properties and capabilities. Hopefully, the final result of the analysis in this paper will show that the two arguments do not represent a satisfactory alternative to the psychological continuity theory.

  • Issue Year: 63/2020
  • Issue No: 3
  • Page Range: 87-104
  • Page Count: 18
  • Language: Serbian