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2 ideas
5664 | Consciousness must involve a subject, and only bodies identify subjects [Ayer] |
Full Idea: It may not make sense to talk of states of consciousness except as the experiences of some conscious subject; and it may well be that this conscious subject can not be identified except by reference to his body. | |
From: A.J. Ayer (The Concept of a Person [1963], §IV) | |
A reaction: It strikes me that Ayer deserves more credit as a pioneer of this view. It tracks back to what may turn out to be the key difficulty for Descartes - how do you individuate a mental substance? I may identify me, but how do I identify you? |
5668 | People own conscious states because they are causally related to the identifying body [Ayer] |
Full Idea: I think personal identity depends on the identity of the body, and that a person's ownership of states of consciousness consists in their standing in a special causal relation to the body by which he is identified. | |
From: A.J. Ayer (The Concept of a Person [1963], §IV) | |
A reaction: I think with this is right, with the slight reservation that Ayer talks as if there were two things which have a causal relationship, implying that the link is contingent. Better to think of the whole thing as a single causal network. |