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Qualitative vs numerical identity?
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All Flashcards in Topic 1.1
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1.1.111 cards
Qualitative vs numerical identity?
Qualitative = exactly alike. Numerical = one and the same thing. Personal identity is numerical.
The persistence question?
What must carry on for a person now to be the same person earlier or later?
The two identity questions?
What are we? (a body/mind/soul?) and What makes us persist? (what keeps us the same over time?)
Why is identity a puzzle at all?
Everything about you changes, yet you stay one person — so something must carry on, but it's unclear what.
Is 'I'm a different person now' literally true?
Usually it means qualitatively different (changed). Numerically it's still you — that's the debate.
Why keep the two senses apart?
Most confusion about identity comes from mixing 'exactly alike' with 'one and the same'.
Reid's 'brave officer' objection?
By memory a person both is and isn't their childhood self — a contradiction for the memory view.
The teleporter thought experiment?
A perfect copy is made and the original destroyed — did you survive or die? Tests each view.
The ship of Theseus?
Every plank is replaced — is it the same ship? Pressures the body view.
How do you reach the top band in Section A?
Explore an issue, argue, weigh different views, and reach a reasoned conclusion — don't just describe.
What does Paper 1 Section A ask?
Use an unseen stimulus + your own knowledge to explore a philosophical issue about being human [25].
1.1.26 cards
The body view of personal identity?
You are your living body (or brain); you exist as long as it does.
The mind / self view?
You are your inner mental life — thoughts, memories, point of view. The body is its home.
The body-swap thought experiment?
Imagine your mind waking in a new body: did YOU move? Tests body vs mind views.
One weakness of the body view?
It must say you don't survive a body-swap, and your cells fully replace over time.
One weakness of the mind view?
It's unclear what a 'mind' is, and we forget large parts of our lives yet still survive.
Why do these views matter?
They answer 'what are we?' — the first identity question, before we ask what makes us persist.
1.1.36 cards
Identity over time — the puzzle?
How you stay one person while your body and mind are gradually replaced.
The ship of Theseus?
Replace every plank one by one — same ship? Pressures physical/body-based identity.
The teleporter thought experiment?
Scan-destroy-rebuild an exact copy elsewhere: did you travel or die? Tests pattern vs physical survival.
'You survived' the teleporter — why?
What matters is the pattern of you, not the exact atoms; the copy continues your mental life.
'You died' in the teleporter — why?
Your original body was destroyed; the copy is only qualitatively identical, not you.
The two-copies objection (Go further)?
Two perfect copies can't both be numerically you, yet neither has a better claim — so pattern-survival can't be identity.
1.1.48 cards
Locke's memory view of identity?
You are your connected chain of memories/consciousness — not your body.
Psychological continuity?
An unbroken chain of memories and mental states linking you over time.
Reid's brave officer objection?
One man at three ages (boy → soldier → general): by memory the general is the soldier and the soldier the boy, but the general isn't the boy — a contradiction for Locke.
Overlapping chains (the fix)?
A links to B, B to C, so A and C are the same person even with no direct memory. Saves Locke from Reid.
Anattā (Vasubandhu)?
Buddhist 'no fixed self': only a changing bundle of experiences; 'the self' is a useful label.
Hume on the self?
Looking inward he found no fixed self — only a bundle of changing perceptions (echoes anattā).
Continuity vs no-self?
Continuity: a chain of memory carries you. No-self: there's no fixed you to carry. A strong essay weighs both.
Order of the memory debate?
Locke (memory) → Reid (objection) → Hume (no-self) → Parfit (overlapping chains; is identity what matters?).
1.1.56 cards
Cultural identity?
The part of who you are shaped by culture — language, gender, religion, nation.
De Beauvoir: 'one is not born but becomes a woman'?
Being a woman is a social role you're shaped into over time, not just a biological fact.
Can a false belief be part of identity?
Debatable: yes (it still shaped who you became) vs no (identity should track what's real).
How far does culture shape identity?
A lot (we think in its categories) but not entirely (people reject and remake their culture). Argue a degree.
The freedom worry about cultural identity?
If culture makes me, am I free? Most keep room for choice within culture's materials.
Why 'to what extent' questions need a degree answer?
Evidence cuts both ways — 'all' or 'nothing' ignores half of it. Argue where the line sits.
1.1.66 cards
Parfit's key claim about identity?
Personal identity may not be what matters — what matters is psychological connectedness and continuity.
Why did Parfit find this liberating?
If identity isn't what matters, the fear of death softens — our values and effects can continue in others.
The main views of identity (topic map)?
Body view · memory (Locke/Reid) · no-self (Vasubandhu/Hume) · Parfit (connectedness).
What does Paper 1 Section A ask?
Use a stimulus + your own knowledge to explore a philosophical issue about being human [25].
What lifts a Section A answer to the top band?
Exploring and weighing several views on the stimulus and reaching a reasoned conclusion — not describing.
Connectedness vs identity?
Identity = being literally the same person. Connectedness = sharing memories, plans, character. Parfit says the second is what we care about.
Topic 1.1 study notes
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