I take it that identity is not something basic to our psychological makeup, even as individuals. There are more basic operations of the human mind than our identity, such as perception, memory, desires, or inclinations. — Moliere
There is the impression-identity, the social-parts-identity, and the expressive-identity; where each layer of identity emerges from the one prior.
I take it that identity is not something basic to our psychological makeup, even as individuals. There are more basic operations of the human mind than our identity, such as perception, memory, desires, or inclinations. — Moliere
There's food for wonder there.... the notion that perception, memory, and desire are more fundamental than identity. Do you mean that a creature could have these things without being aware of being a unique individual? — Mongrel
That would mean that what you mean by identity is awareness of it?
what you mean by identity is awareness of it? — Mongrel
Or perhaps our personal identity is not ours, but arises solely from what others tell us, their memories, their desires and their feelings. We learn a language, and we learn to associate words with referents and give them meanings, feelings, desires that are normative, but are felt to be particular to our self, even though they originate outside of us, and we construct our self and limit our self in this manner. — Cavacava
Physical experiences, imagination, acquisition of knowledge (and exactly what knowledge is acquired), insights, social interactions (and exactly what social interactions), exactly what is learned (and not learned) and so forth contribute to a kernel of identity that is present from the beginning of a life. — Bitter Crank
I would still say there's such a thing as not choosing who you are. — Moliere
What else but genetic instructions would guide the construction and function of the brain? — Bitter Crank
Our identity is made for us, but it is ours none the less, and is either beyond remodeling after a certain point, or remodel-able only through the most strenuous possible efforts (and maybe not even then). — Bitter Crank
That certainly seems to apply in dementia: one's self-identity floats away, sometimes with traumatic interruptions en route. 'You are not my child,' says the mother to the daughter, 'she never comes to visit.' If one no longer has anchoring longer-term memories to which to relate one's perceptions, one loses one's self of oneself. And yet, as Moliere says (interesting thread Moliere), up to then the person might well have got along without thinking much about self-awareness. — mcdoodle
The second train of thought I have is autobiographical. I moved to a new town where I knew absolutely no-one ten years ago. In an odd way I have constructed a new identity - while eventually emerging from the darkness I was in 10 years ago, to reconnect with friends In knew in my old identity too. Yet of course the experiencing animal feels like 'the same' one, and there are various character traits or dispositions which seem shared between the old and new fellow. — mcdoodle
One other thought: the rational part of us has a strong urge to ascribe some logic to personal identity. But to my mind an individual human being is rarely that consistent: sometimes they will do something that directly contradicts something else they do or have done. The human creature does what it can in each particular set of circumstances to get by, and rationalisations come later. — mcdoodle
Our identity is made for us, but it is ours none the less, and is either beyond remodeling after a certain point, or remodel-able only through the most strenuous possible efforts (and maybe not even then). — Bitter Crank
What makes you say that? — Moliere
Could you speak more about this? I'm still having trouble connecting awareness to identity, even with the example of dementia. Perhaps this is because I think of awareness as withing the context of Searle's discussions on consciousness -- where the term refers to our ability to focus or unfocus our mind upon various things within our environment or mind. I gather that awareness and memory are actually linked in this way of referring to awareness, though. — Moliere
By identity I mostly mean the psychological phenomenon where we, as humans, feel like we are this or that category, or the kind of person who does such-and-such, or expresses in particular ways ... — Moliere
I don't think ethical responsibility hangs on the same sort of identity as numeric identity.The identity question has to answered if ethical responsibly is to be asserted. How am I to be held responsible for my actions if I am not the same person today as I was when the action was performed. — Cavacava
Their identity has disappeared for them--and if it has disappeared for them, hasn't their identity disappeared for us to? Who is a person who no longer knows who they are? — Bitter Crank
About this Stanford quote, I would have said "reveal my relation with some past experiencer...""In other words, I can remember only my own experiences, but it is not my memory of an experience that makes it mine; rather, I remember it only because it's already mine. So while memory can reveal my identity with some past experiencer, it does not make that experiencer me." (Stanford) — Cavacava
Or some other strange artform like the movie Synecdoche, New York. Anybody see that? — Mongrel
Personal Construct theory was never very popular, in large part, I think, because the statistical analysis of repertory grids is fairly horrendous for us soft-scientists. But its mere existence as the formalisation of metapsychology is interesting in this context. — unenlightened
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