My future self will be different than my present self in the sense that it will have had more experiences, it will have different memories and most likely different understandings about itself and the world, and so on. On the other hand it will be the same insofar as it must be the same in order for the very idea of it being my future self to make any sense at all. — John
But why were you worrying? After all, no one was caning you in the hallway. Caning may have been impending but it wasn't happening then. So why worry about it? (Again, I know these questions seem stupid) — csalisbury
I have no anwer, other than 'anticipation'. — Wayfarer
Rather the notion of there being the same person at another time is derivative of the phenomenology of the future. — The Great Whatever
Explain why it makes sense for someone who knows he will soon be tortured - but isn't being tortured yet - to fear the impending event. — csalisbury
Rather the notion of there being the same person at another time is derivative of the phenomenology of the future. — The Great Whatever
Explain why it makes sense for someone who knows he will soon be tortured - but isn't being tortured yet - to fear the impending event. — csalisbury
Explain why it makes sense for someone who knows he will soon be tortured - but isn't being tortured yet - to fear the impending event. — csalisbury
I am stabbing my fingernail Into my forehead — dukkha
But you weren't experiencing pain or death (beyond the pain of anxious apprehension) waiting. in the hallway, to be caned. So why be frightened? What did the suffering of a boy, not in the hallway, have to do with you? — csalisbury
But you weren't experiencing pain or death (beyond the pain of anxious apprehension) waiting. in the hallway, to be caned. So why be frightened? What did the suffering of a boy, not in the hallway, have to do with you? — csalisbury
So, the problem here seems to be that the sense of "sameness/ identity" which is purportedly prior to memory, and in fact to be responsible for its very possibility, would seem to be itself impossible without memory. Maybe we can say that it is memory itself, and not any specific memories, which enables a sense of unity to develop such that particular memories can subsequently be connected to, associated with, that unity. — John
So the first step is: we understand our self to be continuous - we understand that there's something that remains the same, despite other personal changes — csalisbury
If, on the other hand, one rejects the idea of a soul, then another explanation must be put forth.
That second explanation is what I was hoping to draw out. — csalisbury
memory itself would be the stream in which individual memories are related and integrated — John
So, well & good. but personal continuity is an explanandum, not an explanans. We can either posit some sort of soul (which, having been posited, drastically lowers any assurance one might have about the impossibility of one's existing after death.) If, on the other hand, one rejects the idea of a soul, then another explanation must be put forth.
That second explanation is what I was hoping to draw out. — csalisbury
Explain why it makes sense for someone who knows he will soon be tortured - but isn't being tortured yet - to fear the impending event.
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