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1649Did Locke Defend the Memory Continuity Criterion of Personal Identity?Locke Studies 10 113-129. 2010.John Locke’s account of personal identity is usually thought to have been proved false by Thomas Reid’s simple ‘Gallant Officer’ argument. Locke is traditionally interpreted as holding that your having memories of a past person’s thoughts or actions is necessary and sufficient for your being identical to that person. This paper argues that the traditional memory interpretation of Locke’s account is mistaken and defends a memory continuity view according to which a sequence of overlapping memorie…Read more
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246An Extended Framework for Preference RelationsEconomics and Philosophy 27 (3): 360-367. 2011.In order to account for non-traditional preference relations the present paper develops a new, richer framework for preference relations. This new framework provides characterizations of non-traditional preference relations, such as incommensurateness and instability, that may hold when neither preference nor indifference do. The new framework models relations with swaps, which are conceived of as transfers from one alternative state to another. The traditional framework analyses dyadic preferen…Read more
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321Phenomenal Continuity and the Bridge ProblemPhilosophia 39 (2): 289-296. 2011.Any theory that analyses personal identity in terms of phenomenal continuity needs to deal with the ordinary interruptions of our consciousness that it is commonly thought that a person can survive. This is the bridge problem. The present paper offers a novel solution to the bridge problem based on the proposal that dreamless sleep need not interrupt phenomenal continuity. On this solution one can both hold that phenomenal continuity is necessary for personal identity and that persons can surviv…Read more
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242A Note in Defence of RatificationismErkenntnis 75 (1): 147-150. 2011.Andy Egan argues that neither evidential nor causal decision theory gives the intuitively right recommendation in the cases The Smoking Lesion, The Psychopath Button, and The Three-Option Smoking Lesion. Furthermore, Egan argues that we cannot avoid these problems by any kind of ratificationism. This paper develops a new version of ratificationism that gives the right recommendations. Thus, the new proposal has an advantage over evidential and casual decision theory and standard ratificationist …Read more
Areas of Interest
| Metaphysics |
| Philosophy of Action |
| Meta-Ethics |
| Normative Ethics |
| 17th/18th Century Philosophy |
PhilPapers Editorships
| Population Ethics |