4 Comments
Sep 15Liked by Andy Masley

Thank you for writing this post Andy, I've been thinking about views on personal identity recently, and agree with what you've written here on it here. I just bought the audiobook of Reasons and Persons, which I've been meaning to read but kept putting off, thanks to this post. I actually do find myself emotionally affected by my skepticism about personal identity though, I think that it has made me less fearful of death.

Overall I agree with a large proportion of the items on this list. The item I most disagree with is your confidence in physicalism, where I am much more agnostic. Shouldn't substantial uncertainty about qualia be at least enough to downgrade confidence in physicalism from fundamental to pretty sure?

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Thanks Tim! And yeah I think uncertainty about qualia should by definition make me much more uncertain about physicalism so I should probably revise that

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Sep 17Liked by Andy Masley

This Saturday, before I saw your post, I was trying to remember a story about a person who uses a teleporter, only to find that it has malfunctioned, and although a copy of him was sent to Mars, he will soon die. I tried searching for it and asking Claude, but to no avail. So imagine my surprise when this afternoon I started Reasons and Persons section 3, only to be immediately met with the story I had been trying to find! From what I've listened to so far I'm finding Parfit very convincing on personal identity and an enjoyable read.

I also took a brief look at Appendix I since you mentioned that as well, and thought it made good arguments against preference utilitarianism, but the only part there I saw dedicated to hedonistic utilitarianism was this bit:

> Narrow Hedonists assume, falsely, that pleasure and pain are two distinctive kinds of experience. Compare the pleasures of satisfying an intense thirst or lust, listening to music, solving an intellectual problem, reading a tragedy, and knowing that one's child is happy. These various experiences do not contain any distinctive common quality.

But these experiences all share the common quality of being pleasurable! And if it is possible to choose whether listening to music or solving an intellectual problem today will make one's life go best, then it seems to me that there must be a single-axis way to represent which is better. I'd like to be convinced otherwise though, since hedonistic utilitarianism seems kind of boring. Anyway sorry for the long rambling comment, reading Parfit is making me have a lot of thoughts.

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Oct 2, 2023Liked by Andy Masley

Thanks for sharing!

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