I am not asking why a banana is a banana. — bizso09
This is not a trivial question, I am not asking why a banana is a banana. — bizso09
Rather, you are asking: why this banana is this banana. This means that this banana is somehow special, compared to the others, because it has the property of "this". — SophistiCat
It seems to me that to say "mine" is a property of a first person perspective assumes that a first perspective is something owned by, or part of, something else. What would a first person perspective be owned by, or part of - your body? Is my brain, eyes and ears, without which wouldn't I have a first person perspective, mine?So the question is, how is the "mine" property assigned to one of the first person perspectives? — bizso09
DNA is just the holder of your genotypes. An organism is a phenotypical expression. Phenotypes are influenced greatly by DNA, but they are also influenced by environmental factors.Short answer, or rather very long answer in very short form: DNA. — tim wood
But unless the banana is conscious, there is no asymmetry (that is relevant to this issue anyway) between one banana and another, and this banana can happily be self-identical without raising any philosophical issues. If a banana is conscious however, then there is an asymmetry, and it would make sense for the banana to ask of itself, why am I this banana, and not my yellow friend over there. — bert1
The asymmetry arises as soon as the banana becomes this banana. — SophistiCat
I don't see the asymmetry. — bert1
Aside from the fact its virtually impossible between exact circumstance, place, society, or genetics you literally went through the absolute same experience and thus have the same perspective, yours would be yours and theirs would be theirs. — Outlander
Yes, but what determines which one you are? — bert1
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