•  228
    Personal identity (edited book)
    with John Barresi
    Blackwell. 2003.
    These are the very scholars that were involved in initiating the revolution in personal identity theory.
  •  163
    What really matters
    Synthese 162 (3). 2008.
    What really matters fundamentally in survival? That question—the one on which I focus—is not about what should matter or about metaphysics. Rather, it is a factual question the answer to which can be determined, if at all, only empirically. I argue that the answer to it is that in the case of many people it is not one’s own persistence, but continuing in ways that may involve one’s own cessation that really matters fundamentally in survival. Call this the surprising result. What are we to make o…Read more
  •  137
    Do historians need philosophy?
    History and Theory 45 (2). 2006.
    The Logic of History: Putting Postmodernism in Perspective. By C. Behan McCullagh
  •  127
    Locke's psychology of personal identity
    Journal of the History of Philosophy 38 (1): 41-61. 2000.
    By attending just to conceptual analysis and metaphysics in connection with Locke's theory of personal identity, but ignoring psychology, one can know that, in Locke's view, consciousness via memory unifies persons over time, but not how consciousness unifies persons, either over time or at a time, nor why, for Locke, the mechanisms of self-constitution are crucially important to personal identity. In explaining Locke's neglected thoughts on the psychology of personal identity, I argue, first, t…Read more
  •  107
    Survival of bodily death: A question of values: Raymond Martin
    Religious Studies 28 (2): 165-184. 1992.
    Does anyone ever survive his or her bodily death ? Could anyone? No speculative questions are older than these, or have been answered more frequently or more variously. None have been laid to rest more often, or — in our times — with more claimed decisiveness. Jay Rosenberg, for instance, no doubt speaks for many contemporary philosophers when he claims, in his recent book, to have ‘ demonstrated ’ that ‘ we cannot [even] make coherent sense of the supposed possibility that a person's history mi…Read more
  •  106
    Beyond positivism: A research program for philosophy of history
    Philosophy of Science 48 (1): 112-121. 1981.
    It is argued that the debate over the positivist theory of historical explanation has made only a limited contribution to our understanding of how historians should defend the explanations they propose importantly because both positivists and their critics tacitly accepted two assumptions. The first assumption is that if the positivist analysis of historical explanation is correct, then historians ought to attempt to defend covering laws for each of the explanations they propose. The second is t…Read more
  •  103
    Memory, connecting, and what matters in survival
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 65 (1): 82-97. 1987.
    This Article does not have an abstract
  •  99
    _Naturalization of the Soul_ charts the development of the concepts of soul and self in Western thought, from Plato to the present. It fills an important gap in intellectual history by being the first book to emphasize the enormous intellectual transformation in the eighteenth century, when the religious 'soul' was replaced first by a philosophical 'self' and then by a scientific 'mind'. The authors show that many supposedly contemporary theories of the self were actually discussed in the eighte…Read more
  •  99
    Self-concern from Priestley to Hazlitt
    with John Barresi
    British Journal for the History of Philosophy 11 (3). 2003.
    himself or a proper object of his egoistic self-concern. Hazlitt concluded that belief in personal identity must be an acquired imaginary conception and that since in reality each of us is no more related to his or her future self than to the future self of any other person none of us is 2 ‘
  •  85
    Fission rejuvenation
    Philosophical Studies 80 (1): 17-40. 1995.
  •  81
    “You have to begin to lose your memory, if only in bits and pieces, to realize that memory is what makes our lives. Life without memory is no life at all, . . . Our memory is our coherence, our reason, our feeling, even our action. Without it, we are nothing.” – Luis Buñuel..
  •  79
    Reincarnation: A Critical Examination (review)
    Religious Studies 33 (3): 349-360. 1997.
  •  66
    Causes and Alternate Causes
    Theoria 36 (2): 82-92. 1970.
  •  66
    Conditionally Necessary Causes
    Analysis 30 (April): 147-150. 1970.
  •  64
    This book is a major contribution to the philosophical literature on the nature of the self, personal identity and survival. Its distinctive methodology is one that is phenomenologically descriptive rather than metaphysical and normative. On the basis of this approach Raymond Martin shows that the distinction between self and other is not nearly as fundamental a feature of our so-called egoistic values as has been traditionally thought. He explains how the belief in a self as a fixed, continuous…Read more
  •  57
    The essential difference between history and science
    History and Theory 36 (1): 1-14. 1997.
    My thesis is that there is a deep, intractable difference, not between history and science per se, but between paradigmatically central kinds of historical interpretations-call them humanistic historical interpretations-and theories of any sort that are characteristic of the physical sciences. The difference is that unlike theories in the physical sciences, good humanistic historical interpretations reveal subjectivity, agency, and meaning. I use the controversy provoked by Gordon Wood's recent …Read more
  •  56
    1. In the Essay, Locke’s most controversial claim, which he slipped into Book IV almost as an aside, was that matter might think (Locke1975:IV.iii.6;540-1).i Either because he was genuinely pious, which he was, or because he was clever, which he also was, he tied the denial that matter might think to the claim that God’s powers are limited, thus, attempting to disarm his critics. It did not work. Stillingfleet and others were outraged. If matter can think, then for explanatory purposes the immat…Read more
  •  54
    Personal identity and causality: Becoming unglued
    with Daniel Kolak
    American Philosophical Quarterly 24 (4): 339-347. 1987.
  •  51
    Raymond Martin and John Barresi trace the development of Western ideas about personal identity and reveal the larger intellectual trends, controversies, and ideas that have revolutionized the way we think about ourselves.
  •  48
    From the thirteenth through the sixteenth centuries, European philosophers were preoccupied with using their newfound access to Aristotle’s metaphysics and natural philosophy to develop an integrated account, hospitable to Christianity, of everything that was thought to exist, including God, pure finite spirits, the immaterial souls of humans, the natural world of organic objects and inorganic objects. This account included a theory of human mentality. In the sixteenth and early seventeenth cent…Read more
  •  47
    Empirically conclusive reasons and scepticism
    Philosophical Studies 28 (3). 1975.
  •  43
    Self-interest and survival
    American Philosophical Quarterly 29 (4): 319-30. 1992.
  •  42
    On tense, aspect, modality and meaning
    Philosophica 19 (1): 69-87. 1977.
  •  38
    It fills an important gap in intellectual history by being the first book to emphasize the enormous intellectual transformation in the eighteenth century, when...
  •  37
    Hazlitt on the Future of the Self
    with John Baressi
    Journal of the History of Ideas 56 (3). 1995.
    William Hazlitt's moment occurred in 1794, when he was sixteen years old. In that moment Hazlitt thought he realized three things: that we are naturally connected to ourselves in the past and present but only imagina-.
  •  37
    Progress in historical studies
    History and Theory 37 (1). 1998.
    Everyone with their feet on the ground admits that in the physical sciences there has been progress. One can debate the niceties. The hard rock is that our ability to predict and control natural events and processes is greater now than it has ever been. And there has been astonishing technological fallout