The Evident Connexion: Hume on Personal Identity by Galen Strawson [Book Review]

Journal of the History of Philosophy 51 (3):491-492 (2013)
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Abstract

Hume understands identity as “invariableness and uninterruptedness” through a supposed change in time, something true only of objects he calls steadfast. And Hume discerns nothing steadfast about the mind or self—nothing like a substance or soul underlying the changing and interrupted succession of perceptions we experience in ourselves. I nevertheless think of myself as the same person over time. A central concern of the Treatise discussion of personal identity is to give a psychological explanation of how we arrive at this belief in personal identity. The answer, very broadly, is that it is a fiction of the imagination produced by certain associative principles. Hume notoriously goes on to disavow this ..

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Abe (Abraham) Roth
Ohio State University

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