
Who Am I? Who Is She?
A Naturalistic, Holistic, Somatic Approach to Personal Identity
- 331 pages
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
Who Am I? Who Is She?
A Naturalistic, Holistic, Somatic Approach to Personal Identity
About this book
Are 'persons' physical things, members of the species homo sapiens which exist solely in materialist form, continuous in structure with other living things? Or is the issue a more complex one: are there more dimensions to being a person than mere physical, biological existence? These are matters of interest and discussion in many fields of study in this age of individuality. In this wide-ranging essay, the author addresses various aspects of the issue, including the history of self and identity. The ancient tradition of dualism is rejected in favour of a straightforward holistic and naturalistic account of selfhood; it is argued that the mind arises in an emergent sense from the body and personal identity is best expressed in terms of a self-reflective and meaningful narrative. The approach is principally from an analytic philosophy point of view but also takes on–board psychological and sociological aspects of self and identity.
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Table of contents
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Quintessence, Aims and Structure
- 2 Self and Identity in Historical Context
- 3 Dualism, Monism and the End of the Debate
- 4 Body, Brain and Mind
- 5 Aspects of Personal Identity
- 6 Some Reductionist Approaches
- 7 Qualitative Aspects of Self and Identity