Here. — Banno
Can you make sense of this? "In some possible world, Bert is not Bert"? — Banno
Why am I me? Why am I not the person next to me? — JohnLocke
(I don't want to persuade you you are wrong about the metaphysics, just that you are wrong to say this is a grammatical problem rather than a metaphysical one). — bert1
The point is that there is a metaphysical assumption behind my language use, such that the referent of 'I' and 'bert1' can be separated under some circumstances. — bert1
However, it just follows from being Bert(n), that you are Bert(n). There is nothing here to explain. — Banno
Barney says "Phew, I might have been a snail. I could have been a snail had I not done that good deed in a previous life. I am Barney, rather than Sammy the Snail, because I did the right thing." — bert1
...his most essential self is his soul... — bert1
Why am I me? — JohnLocke
However it is possible (at east logically, if not practically) that I could be someone other than bert1. — bert1
Do you think the sentence: "Why is my soul in this body?" has grammatical issues? — bert1
Depends what you mean by soul. — Banno
Why am I me? — JohnLocke
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