Also re this, sure, one might think that, and it's not that there's no relation, but the way the terms are used conventionally in philosophy is really two quite different ideas.One might think that 'personal identity' is a subclass of the much broader class of 'identity' — csalisbury
True, but we're talking as peers aren't we. If you think that identity does not persist over time, then the very idea of personal identity is incoherent. The only way to salvage it is to make it a conventional term that has nothing to do with identity. Unless you're claiming that identity doesn't persist over time except for one kind of identity, personal identity, which does.Also re this, sure, one might think that, and it's not that there's no relation, but the way the terms are used conventionally in philosophy is really two quite different ideas.
That's a conflation of two different ideas.If you think that identity does not persist over time, then the very idea of personal identity is incoherent — csalisbury
And I clearly presented two ways of understanding the relationships between the two terms.That's a conflation of two different ideas.
And I clearly presented two ways of understanding the relationships between the two terms. — csalisbury
You're asking me to detail how the executioners knife is causally related to Alex's anguish? — csalisbury
Well, you'd be able to recognize a CAD model of a Cadillac as opposed to a Cad model of a Dodge pickup, wouldn't you? — John
The executioner's muscles move a knife which cuts into Alex's flesh and his nerves and cause pain.
I'm assuming you're not asking for the mathematical explanation of how sharp edges cleave flesh? — csalisbury
Okay, and you're saying that has what to do with the causal connection between Alex at T1 and Alex at T2
I'm not saying it has anything at all to do with it. — csalisbury
But that was what we were talking about!
I brought up causal connection as an example of the non-identity connection of Alex @ T1 to Alex @ T2. That was the whole point of that.
I didn't say anything pro or con about "having a good reason"--there are no facts about whether one has a good reason to feel some way of other.
Again, there aren't any facts about whether someone has a "good reason" to feel any particular way....Different people will feel that something counts or doesn't count as a good reason for feeling some way, but they could feel either way about any reason.
& We're done! — csalisbury
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