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The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20040610182354/http://www.maxmore.com:80/disscont.htm

THE DIACHRONIC SELF

Identity, Continuity, Transformation

Max More

(c)1995 Max More

December 1995

CONTENTS

PART 1: REDUCTIONISM, CAUSE, AND IDENTITY

Ch.1: Causal Conditions for Continuity

Ch.2: The Terminus of the Self

  • Bodily Death and Personal Death: Death of the biological organism and death of the person.
  • Two Meanings of 'Dead': Temporary and irreversible loss of life.
  • Permanence vs. Irreversibility: Permanent and Theoretical Death
  • Irreversible Cessation and Types of Continuity: Information vs function-based criteria.
  • Deanimate: A state apart from life and death. Distinctions between deanimate, inactivate and dormant.
  • Partial Death.
  • Declaring Death and Deanimation: Declaration as partly factual assessment, partly decision.
  • Practical Importance of the Deanimate Category: Effects on attitudes, status, and survival prospects.

    PART 2: TRANSFORMATION, CONCERN, AND VALUE

    Ch.3: A Transformationist Account of Continuity Introduction.

    I. THE METAPHYSICS OF CONNECTEDNESS Measuring connectedness: The components of psychological continuity: memories, intentions, dispositions, beliefs, abilities, desires, values, projects.

    II. NORMATIVE INFERENCES

  • Reductionism and the Depth of a Life: Is personal identity less deep on a reductionist view? Is death less significant on a reductionist view?
  • Transformationism: Connectedness vs. Continuity.
  • Disproportionality of Connectedness and Concern: Degree of concern for your future phase need not be proportional to connectedness degree: * Connectedness higher than apparent: Measures of centrality. Relative weighting of the components in terms of the types of centrality. * Intrinsically vs. instrumentally significant features.
  • Transformationism. * Valuing life as a whole/long stretches. * Ideal self: Changes that bring you closer to your ideal self do not reduce the degree of future concern. Difference with Taylor's view of evaluations as foundation of identity. * Holding self-transformation as a central project.
  • Continuity and Structuring a Life (a) Life Plans: Coherence of action & rational life plans.
  • (b) Principles: Incorporating principles to strengthen sticking to project. Self-definition by principles. Values & symbolism of actions. Principles as (i) Foundations: constitute/create identity; (ii) Regulators/filters: set boundaries to possible actions and identity.

    Ch.4: Technological Transformation and AssimilationI. Augmentative and Deteriorative Transformation

    II. Integration of Change


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