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Spirituality

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F

Unknown Territories

Joined
05 Dec 05
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20408
27 Mar 14

Originally posted by LemonJello
?

At first glance, that looks like a fairly atrocious synopsis.
Feel free to correct it...

Quiz Master

RHP Arms

Joined
09 Jun 07
Moves
48793
28 Mar 14
1 edit

Originally posted by twhitehead
If I cut your brain down the middle, do we have two people or one?
This used to be done for people with extreme epilepsy ... with bizarre results!

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Split-brain

Cape Town

Joined
14 Apr 05
Moves
52945
28 Mar 14

Originally posted by LemonJello
As for the question you highlight, I think probably any sane view of what constitutes a person will have to reference psychological properties or capacities.
I think it all depends on context. I see nothing wrong with announcing that I have found Ramesses II, when in fact what I have found is a mummified body whose brains have been removed.
A tombstone typically says "here lies ....." giving the name of the deceased.
Clearly we still identify the body with the living person even after death.

L

Joined
24 Apr 05
Moves
3061
28 Mar 14
2 edits

Originally posted by twhitehead
I think it all depends on context. I see nothing wrong with announcing that I have found Ramesses II, when in fact what I have found is a mummified body whose brains have been removed.
A tombstone typically says "here lies ....." giving the name of the deceased.
Clearly we still identify the body with the living person even after death.
Clearly we still identify the body with the living person even after death.


Just because one may associate this body with the person it housed, and honor it as such, does not mean that one will take this body to be numerically identical with that person. This is still perfectly consistent with the idea that this body does not now constitute a person at all and that the entity whose personhood was associated with this body ceased to exist a long time ago.

Anyway, yes, views on this run the gamut. On one extreme, some will claim that a physical body is not even necessary for instantiation of a person. On the other end, some will claim that the psychological states commonly associated with personhood are simply identical with physical states, or are physical states that have been miscategorized. And probably everything in between.