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  • In your day-to-day life, you probably assume a whole bunch of different identities.

  • You might be a sister to your brother, a daughter to your parents, a colleague to your co-worker.

  • A mentor to the kids you teach.

  • Or you might think of your identity as being based on your interests, your skills, or things like your gender or ethnicity.

  • Whatever they are, I’ll bet that you think of your identities as being pretty fixed.

  • Stable. And you likeem that way.

  • And if that’s the case, I’d like you to meet this guy: 18th century Scottish philosopher David Hume.

  • Because, he says youre wrong.

  • Hume argued that the idea of the self doesn’t persist over time.

  • He said there is no you that is the same person from birth to death.

  • He said the concept of the self is just an illusion.

  • This could be either liberating or terrifying, depending on how you look at it.

  • I mean, if you don’t have an identity, you don’t have to worry about identity theft.

  • But what does it mean for my understanding of myself, and for the people I love, if there is no single, constant me?

  • If that’s the case, then the person I’m married to is literally not the person I fell in love with, or made those vows to.

  • Which would suggest that I don’t need to keep those vows, and neither does she.

  • And what about personal responsibility?

  • How can you hold someone accountable for their actions, if theyre not the same person now that they were before?

  • And how can you be responsible for something that you did, if youre always changing?

  • This is gonna get dicey.

  • [Theme Music]

  • If you joined me last time when we talked about personal identity, youll remember that we

  • considered two main possibilities for what might preserveyouas the same person over time.

  • One approach was the body theory, the sort of go-to view of things, which holds that

  • you remainyouover time, because you just occupy the same body from birth to death.

  • And the other was John Locke’s memory theory,

  • the view that your memories are what makes you the same person over time:

  • I’m me, because I remember being me in the past.

  • But both of these models have some problems.

  • No matter how much we want the idea of permanent, persistent selves to be a thing, David Hume said that they just aren’t.

  • For him, it was really a no-brainer.

  • If having a certain identity means possessing the same set of properties, he said, then

  • how could anyone really maintain the same identity from one moment to the next?

  • I clearly don’t share all the same properties as my childhood selfor even my self before I shaved today

  • so Hume would say that it’s silly to pretend I’m still me.

  • But I feel like me. So what did Hume think was going on?

  • Hume said that the so-calledselfis just a bundle of impressions, consisting of a zillion different things

  • my body, my mind, emotions, preferences, memories, even labels that are imposed on me by others.

  • Think of a boxand say it’s markedHank” – and then put in that box everything that makes me who I am.

  • My DNA, mannerisms, political leanings, my glasses, the relationships I have with others, the various roles I hold.

  • Then, you take away the box.

  • Hume’s point is, theselfis just shorthand for all the junk in the box.

  • And the fact that there is no box points out that there’s no single underlying thing that holds it all together.

  • And meanwhile, some of the stuff in the bundle goes away, and new stuff shows up.

  • So, if you look at the bundle that is me now, and compare it with the bundle that my mom

  • and dad brought home from the hospital,

  • they would be almost completely different.

  • So Hume said were all just ever-changing bundles of impressions that our minds are

  • fooled into thinking of as constant,

  • because theyre packaged in these fleshy receptacles that basically look the same from one day to the next.

  • To explore this some more, let’s bounce over to the Thought Bubble for some Flash Philosophy.

  • Contemporary British philosopher Derek Parfit, probably after watching a Star Trek marathon, posed this thought experiment.

  • Imagine a machine that breaks you down atom-by-atom, copies all of that information, and transmits it to Mars, at the speed of light.

  • Once that information gets to Mars, another machine uses it to re-create you, atom by atom,

  • using copies of the same organic stuff that you were composed of here on earth.

  • The person who wakes up on Mars has all the same memories and personality as you didand that person thinks it’s you.

  • So here’s the questionis this space travel?

  • Did you travel to Mars?

  • Is the transported person really you?

  • Or was a new being created that just happens to correspond to you, atom by atom, thought by thought?

  • Now, consider this: What if a new version of the machine is created, so that now, instead of destroying your body,

  • it can simply be scanned, and all the information can be re-created on Mars, but the you here on earth still exists.

  • Now did you travel? Or were you just replicated?

  • If youre here on earth, are you also on Mars?

  • Wowuh, yeah, thanks, Thought Bubble… I think.

  • Parfit agrees with Hume that there isn’t such a thing as personal identity over time.

  • So, he says, in either case, you didn’t travel through space

  • that’s just a new you that shows up on Mars, whether the old you was destroyed or still exists.

  • And you know what?

  • Even if you hopped on a spaceship and flew to Mars the old-fashioned way, it’d still be a new you that arrives,

  • because you wouldve experienced all sorts of changes during the trip.

  • But the thing is, Parfit thought Hume missed a really important point.

  • Even though there isn’t a singular you from birth to death,

  • Parfit says that each of us has a psychological connectedness with our selves over time.

  • Think about your life as being like a piece of chainmail.

  • The mesh that is your personal identity is made up of lots of separate chains,

  • and those chains intersect at certain points, to make up the chain mail.

  • As you follow the timeline of one particular set of links, new links are being created that add to the chain.

  • And as time passes, the links that are farther back in your past slowly start to drop off,

  • as they lose their psychological connection to you.

  • So, when you stopped loving Dora the Explorer, that link dropped away.

  • And when you discovered that you totally love philosophy, a new link was created.

  • But some chains intersect with that other chain, and they have links that persist for

  • a long time, like the love you have for your parents.

  • So Parfit says that, sure, I’m not the same person that I was in elementary school.

  • And I won’t be the same person when I die.

  • I’m not even really the same person I was when I started this sentence, because every experience changes us, at least a little.

  • But parts of me survive the passage of time, because theyre psychologically connected to my previous selves.

  • And survival is what’s important, for Parfit.

  • As long as enough of the elements of you persist, you see yourself as relevantly the same.

  • But not for a whole lifetime. Parfit would say none of the you that existed at birth is still around

  • your physical matter is almost all different, and you have no memory of that time, and your preferences have completely changed.

  • Baby You has not survived. But some of Last Year You probably has.

  • And Parfit seems to have hit on an important insight here.

  • Think about what you do when you catch up with an old friend.

  • The first thing you do is ask what’s happened since you last spoke.

  • What youre doing, without really thinking about it, is recognizing that you both have changed.

  • If the changes are big, then your friend could seem like a stranger at first.

  • So, when it’s someone you care about, you take the time to reacquaint yourself with this new person.

  • Because, you recognize the need to always know the most updated version of that person.

  • But the opposite can also happen.

  • Think about that aunt you only see at Christmas, who still pinches your cheek and gives you a new American Girl doll every year.

  • She probably knew what you loved when you were 10.

  • But she doesn’t know the current you.

  • The version of you she’s shopping for at Christmas doesn’t exist anymore.

  • But since you rarely see each other, and you haven’t made the effort to know the new yous,

  • youre both looking past each other in that painfully awkward way that makes holidays with relatives so special.

  • So now let’s think back to the question we discussed earlier

  • if I’m not the same me over time, how do I make sense of promises, obligations, and responsibilities?

  • Parfit’s theory gives us an answer! Your degree of responsibility and obligation corresponds

  • to your degree of connection to the person who made the promise or incurred the responsibility.

  • So, if you were a kindergarten bully who grew up to be a totally sweet guy who would never

  • bully anyone, you don’t need to feel any guilt.

  • Youre not that person anymoreyou don’t bear responsibility for his actions.

  • Likewise, if you and your childhood bestie pinkie-swore to be each other’s maids of honor when you grew up,

  • but now the two of you have nothing in common, youre off the hook for that promise.

  • Now about those marriage vows?

  • Well, a promise that lasts a lifetime doesn’t really make sense, in Parfit’s view.

  • And there are actually people, using this line of reasoning, who argue that marriage contracts should be temporary,

  • with the option of renewalkind of like a cell phone plan.

  • But others have said that marriage vows can actually stay relevant, even after a lifetime of changes.

  • Over the years, you and your spouse both change, and become different people.

  • But, these thinkers point out, you may be constantly reaffirming the promises you made on your wedding day.

  • So, a wedding vow isn’t a promise you made years ago, when you were a completely different person.

  • It’s a promise you made this morning, when you took out the trash and cleaned up the hairball the cat left on the rug.

  • Why is it always on the rug?

  • So clearly, were not talking about Batman, or science fiction, or hypothetical trips to Mars anymore.

  • Were talking about how philosophy can teach you about yourself, and the people you care about,

  • and how you can continue to know them and be close to them over time.

  • Today we continued our exploration of personal identity, learning about Hume’s bundle theory

  • and Parfit’s theory of survival through psychological connectedness.

  • Next time, were going to address a term that weve been taking for granted throughout

  • this whole discussion: person.

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  • Crash Course Philosophy is produced in association with PBS Digital Studios.

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  • This episode of Crash Course was filmed in the Doctor Cheryl C. Kinney Crash Course Studio

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