Andrew4Handel         
         
DingoJones         
         A popular question. Why am I me? Why am I not the person next to me? When I die, will I be another person in the past or future? Was I another person before I was born? If so, why am I not everyone? — JohnLocke
Andrew4Handel         
         
Banno         
         I view it as a central issue in the study of consciousness. — Andrew4Handel
Yeah, I think it is a real issue. — bert1
Exactly.Because everybody else was already taken. — Bitter Crank
Yes.Because it's logically impossible for you not to be you. — Purple Pond
That line of thinking will lead us further down the garden path.Who are the "I" and "me" of which you speak? And how do you know they are one and the same? — gloaming
I am here.Where am "I" located and how? — Andrew4Handel
Streetlight         
         
Banno         
         "A thing is identical with itself." — StreetlightX
and were surprised!!It is as if in imagination we put a thing into its own shape and saw that it fitted'. — StreetlightX
Streetlight         
         "I am who I am" might offer a certain reinforcement to one's identity. — Banno
Banno         
         
Banno         
         However it is possible (at east logically, if not practically) that I could be someone other than bert1. — bert1
A popular question. Why am I me? Why am I not the person next to me? When I die, will I be another person in the past or future? Was I another person before I was born? If so, why am I not everyone? — JohnLocke
Andrew4Handel         
         
Michael Ossipoff         
         .A popular question. Why am I me? Why am I not the person next to me?
.When I die, will I be another person in the past or future?
.Was I another person before I was born?
.If so, why am I not everyone?
apokrisis         
         "A thing is identical with itself."-There is no finer example of a useless proposition, — StreetlightX
Why am I me? Why am I not the person next to me? — JohnLocke
bloodninja         
         Why am I me? — JohnLocke
BrianW         
         Why am I me? — JohnLocke
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