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2 - Teleology, Narrative and Death
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- By Roman Altshuler, University of the Pacific
- Edited by John Lippitt, Patrick Stokes
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- Book:
- Narrative, Identity and the Kierkegaardian Self
- Published by:
- Edinburgh University Press
- Published online:
- 15 September 2017
- Print publication:
- 18 May 2015, pp 29-45
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- Chapter
- Export citation
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Summary
I
Consider the fission problem: a single human being, A, is divided into two such humans, B and C, through teleportation, divine intervention, or some other mythical power. Both B and C are psychologically continuous with A. As the established account of personal identity would have it, psychological continuity is sufficient for personal identity. But if fission is conceptually possible, the psychologica continuity view of personal identity faces a problem: since both B and C are psychologically continuous and thus identical with A, given the transitivity of identity it must follow that B and C are identical with each other. And yet clearly they cannot be; not only are they two distinct bodies, but they are not psychologically continuous with each other! One way to attempt to circumvent this problem is by positing a teleological conception of personal identity. On such a conception, B and C are different individuals in part because, having diverged, they have different ends. Thus, B is identical with A insofar as both A and B are the same whole, whose end is the end of B. C is identical with A for the same reason. But B and C need not be identical on this account, because the identity does not hold between A and B and A and C as an identity of part to part, but rather as an identity of whole to whole in time. Similarly, my college has a single basement which serves two buildings, and thus the basement is part of each building in space without the two buildings being identical.
It may thus seem that the best way to address the problem is by switching to what is often taken as the teleological extension of the psychological continuity view – a narrative theory of identity. Such a view aims to preserve what is right about psychological continuity, its reliance on psychological rather than physical features of human beings to explain their continuity through time, while denying that persons are reducible to causal chains of psychological states, on the grounds that those states themselves have a meaning only within the wider whole that is the self.