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v0.1.1489
NotesPhilosophy HLTopic 1.4
Unit 1 · Being human · Topic 1.4

IB Philosophy HL — Personhood

Topic 1.4 of IB Philosophy covers Personhood, which is part of Unit 1: Being human. Students explore key concepts including What is a person?, Self-consciousness, Agency, and more. A strong understanding of personhood is essential for IB Philosophy HL exams and builds the foundation for connected topics across the syllabus.

Higher Level students should use this topic hub as a map: start with the shared sub-topics, then follow the HL-only extensions and exam-skill links where this topic asks for deeper analysis.

Exam technique guidePractice questions

Key concepts in Personhood

Key Idea: Topic 1.4 pulls apart two words we usually run together: human being (a species) and person (a status — a being that can think, choose and be held responsible). Personhood is one of the strongest issues to reach for in Paper 1 Section A, the 25-mark essay on what it is to be human. This whole topic feeds it.

🧠 The five big questions, one card each

Topic 1.4 at a glance

  1. 1.4.1 · What is a person? — 'Human being' is a species label; 'person' is a status — a being that can think, choose and be held responsible. Warren's checklist (consciousness, reasoning, self-motivated activity, communication, self-awareness) makes personhood about traits, not species.
  2. 1.4.2 · Self-consciousness — Not just being aware, but being aware that you're aware. Locke: a person 'can consider itself as itself' across time. This may be a matter of degree — some animals show a flicker of it in the mirror test.
  3. 1.4.3 · Agency — An agent DOES things for reasons, not just has things happen to it. 'She moved to catch the ball' (a reason she holds) vs 'she flinched at a spark' (a cause pushing her). Reasons that are truly yours mark real agency.
  4. 1.4.4 · Moral responsibility — You can be fairly praised or blamed only for what you really DID as a free, informed agent. Blame lifts under coercion or in a small child. Kant: because we're rational agents, we have DIGNITY — worth beyond price.
  5. 1.4.5 · Animals and AI as persons — Could a non-human count? Singer: if it can feel, it has moral status. Wiredu/Menkiti: personhood grows by degree through community. AI's deepest test isn't cleverness but whether there's anything it's LIKE to be it.
Never confuse human being with person. 'Human being' is biological — your species, Homo sapiens. 'Person' is a status about mind and morals — a being that can think, choose and be held responsible. Once you separate them, the hard cases open up: could a non-human be a person? Could a human fail to be one?

✍️ Bring it together — a Section A question

IB-style questionExplore[25 marks]

Stimulus — A carer speaks about the assistance robot on her ward: "The patients say please and thank you to it. They apologise when they bump it. Part of me wants to say it's just a machine — but the way they treat it, you'd think it was one of us." With explicit reference to the stimulus and your own knowledge, explore a philosophical issue related to what it is to be human.

🔒 Model answer plan

See the mark-by-mark plan — for / against / judgement, with marking guidance — in study mode.

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Important: Describing views instead of arguing them. Don't just say 'Warren thinks X, Kant thinks Y.' Give each view a reason, test it with an objection, then decide. A name earns nothing without its argument — and a top answer always reaches a reasoned conclusion, never 'it's just opinion'.

✅ Check yourself

If you can answer these six, you have the spine of the whole topic.

Human being vs person? 'Human being' is a species (Homo sapiens); 'person' is a status — a being that can think, choose and be held responsible.

Warren's marks of personhood? Consciousness, reasoning, self-motivated activity, communication, and self-awareness — traits, not a particular species.

What is self-consciousness (Locke)? Being aware that you're aware — a person 'can consider itself as itself', the same thinking thing, at different times and places.

Reason vs cause in agency? A cause pushes you (flinching at a spark); a reason is one you hold and act on (moving to catch a ball). Real agency runs on your own reasons.

Kant on dignity? Because we're rational agents who can reason about right and wrong, we have dignity — a priceless worth that can't be traded away.

The deepest test for AI personhood? Not cleverness but whether there's anything it's LIKE to be the machine — an inner feel, not just the right outputs.

Exam Tips

  • Section A is a 25-mark essay on the core theme — personhood is a strong issue, and this whole topic feeds it.
  • Turn the stimulus into a question about what makes something a person, then explore → evaluate → conclude.
  • Name a thinker ONLY with their argument — a name on its own earns no marks.
  • Always weigh at least two views and end on a reasoned conclusion, not a list.

What you'll learn in Topic 1.4

  • 1.4.1 What is a person?
  • 1.4.2 Self-consciousness
  • 1.4.3 Agency
  • 1.4.4 Moral responsibility
  • 1.4.5 Animals and AI as persons
Suggested study order: Read the notes for each sub-topic below → test yourself with flashcards → attempt practice questions → review exam technique.

Study resources — 1.4 Personhood

1.4.1

What is a person?

Notes
1.4.2

Self-consciousness

Notes
1.4.3

Agency

Notes
1.4.4

Moral responsibility

Notes
1.4.5

Animals and AI as persons

Notes

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Topic 1.4 Personhood forms a core part of Unit 1: Being human in IB Philosophy HL. Mastering these concepts will strengthen your understanding of connected topics across the syllabus and prepare you for exam questions that require analysis, evaluation, and real-world application.

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