What Is You?
I've been deliberating over this post for a while - having read Reasons and Persons (I skipped the first section 'Reasons' because I wanted to get straight into the 'Persons' stuff ;-) by Derek Parfit, I wanted to put down the points which impressed me the most, as would befit a book that turns your view of 'you' upside down...well, you know when I read a book and I find something that I really like, I turn down the corner of that page: I should have reversed the habit this time, and turned down pages on which I found nothing interesting! I really didn't know how to sum it all up - it's difficult to take any one argument out of context, as one is built on top of another, and another...and I won't kid myself here or try and fool you, dear reader - a lot of it was over my head.
But then, YouTube to the rescue! Derek Parfit himself, interviewed on a 1996 Channel 4 documentary, 'Brainspotting'. Please watch this, as the author introduces three ideas from his book which illustrate his view of the self: the brain transplant, the nation (Hume's idea) and teletransportation. I can't disagree with anything he says. Yet I must admit - I find myself agreeing (wanting to agree?) with the interviewers conclusion - I feel that there must be something that is really 'me' that cannot be described by memories or anything else, something 'over and above' the actual matter that makes me - I'm sure this desire springs from the same part of me that doesn't really believe that I'm going to be dead forever. It makes me wonder, is there a point at which we all stop and say 'I can't handle any more truth than this'? Some may draw the line further than others, but is there a point where the utility of a belief is more important than whether it's true or not?
I had this most existential of fears as a younger (another ;-) me, in another context: instead of teletransportation, read death and resurrection: I lost sleep wondering whether God would create a perfect copy of me in a future resurrection if I died, rather than 'me' - and what the hell was 'me' then if it was possible to create a perfect copy? You see I was raised in a religion which discounts the 'further fact' of a soul, which would be unique to an individual (would be that individual) and would do away with these fears...
This I do know: the seeming lack of anything that is truly 'me' gets filed right alongside death in my mind: I know these things are true, and I go to their files frequently, but I can't keep them open on my desk, I just couldn't cope...
Watch from 1:28 on the first one. If these go down or you find YouTube's copies too slow, I've put them on Dailymotion here and here.
But then, YouTube to the rescue! Derek Parfit himself, interviewed on a 1996 Channel 4 documentary, 'Brainspotting'. Please watch this, as the author introduces three ideas from his book which illustrate his view of the self: the brain transplant, the nation (Hume's idea) and teletransportation. I can't disagree with anything he says. Yet I must admit - I find myself agreeing (wanting to agree?) with the interviewers conclusion - I feel that there must be something that is really 'me' that cannot be described by memories or anything else, something 'over and above' the actual matter that makes me - I'm sure this desire springs from the same part of me that doesn't really believe that I'm going to be dead forever. It makes me wonder, is there a point at which we all stop and say 'I can't handle any more truth than this'? Some may draw the line further than others, but is there a point where the utility of a belief is more important than whether it's true or not?
I had this most existential of fears as a younger (another ;-) me, in another context: instead of teletransportation, read death and resurrection: I lost sleep wondering whether God would create a perfect copy of me in a future resurrection if I died, rather than 'me' - and what the hell was 'me' then if it was possible to create a perfect copy? You see I was raised in a religion which discounts the 'further fact' of a soul, which would be unique to an individual (would be that individual) and would do away with these fears...
This I do know: the seeming lack of anything that is truly 'me' gets filed right alongside death in my mind: I know these things are true, and I go to their files frequently, but I can't keep them open on my desk, I just couldn't cope...
Watch from 1:28 on the first one. If these go down or you find YouTube's copies too slow, I've put them on Dailymotion here and here.