The fruit fly on my banana is a physical body, but is not a person.Is a person a physical body? — khaled
OK, that seems to be your actual question: How is the identity of a person carried from one physical state to a different one. A body is different from one moment to the next, so it changes every second. What makes you now and you a second ago the same person, but the collection of matter that is me is not you from one second ago?Well, we still say someone is the same person they were even if they lose an arm or a leg, despite now having a different physical body, so it can't be that.
So it's obviously a bad idea to draw conclusions from language conventions. Same with the 'change identity' example,. which is just a reference to what's on your documents.We also use "your body" often, implying that a body is possessed by the person, but is not them.
Is a person a mind? Well, we still say "your mind" very often implying that the mind is possessed by the person, and is not the person. We also say that someone is the same person even if they change their mind about something.
Just another possession by language convention. One needs to define consciousness carefully here. Don't use the 'awake vs asleep' definition, which you did here.Is it "consciousness"? If so is an unconscious human no longer a person? That seems absurd.
By that definition, it is murder for me (well, somebody else maybe) not to commit as many rapes as possible. Come to think of it, it isn't far from the Catholic definition.A person is a potential of becoming a being. — TheMadMan
This seems to be entirely a function of pragmatic convention. — noAxioms
So it's obviously a bad idea to draw conclusions from language conventions. — noAxioms
"Person" does not have the sort of sharp and unambiguous meaning as — SophistiCat
Totally agree. So don't draw conclusions from that convention, since it doesn't stand up to scrutiny, however functional it may be.But language conventions are pragmatic conventions. — SophistiCat
OK, poorly worded on my part. It makes it sound like lawyers define it instead of just use it. A duck knows which duckling's are hers. That's a pragmatic usage without lawyers or language. Lawyers use this pragmatic definition of identity captured in language with the word 'person' just like everything else uses the definition, using language or not. That's what I was trying to convey.A 'person' is a legal human entity.
— noAxioms
So there were no people before the formation of societies advanced enough to have legal definitions of persons? — khaled
Need more detail. All words describe a concept, even if it isn't the concept being referenced, but rather the concept as a means for the reference. I say 'that rock', and I mean that actual rock, not just the concept of it.To simplify a complex question, a 'person' is a word we use to describe a concept. — Philosophim
The lawyers seem to debate this, with the side taken depending on the desired outcome. Your car accident killed two pregnant women, one a week pregnant driving the other one in labor to the hospital. How many charges of manslaughter?The question is, "When we bring more people into the picture, can we find a common set of concepts that we can all agree is a person?" — Philosophim
OK, but the discussion was about how I am a specific person and not a different person. Also, what if we genetically modify the genome and produce something arguably not human? Does it have human rights? This speaks directly to your species definition of 'person'. At what point did we become people and not some ape? How far do we have to evolve in the future before we're no longer 'people' as defined as what humans were in the year 2000?At its core, people are a living minimum set of genetics. This is the reason you are a person and not a monkey. — Philosophim
That's very pragmatic, yes. Agree. It brings to mind the arguments 200 years ago that black people were not people, hence being a emotionally satisfying position that justified their cruel treatment. It didn't cause harm to others since the non-humans were not 'others' any more than your cattle was.I would answer, "A person is what is emotionally satisfying to you personally, while not unduly harming yourself or others." — Philosophim
OK, but the discussion was about how I am a specific person and not a different person. — noAxioms
Your car accident killed two pregnant women, one a week pregnant driving the other one in labor to the hospital. How many charges of manslaughter? — noAxioms
Also, what if we genetically modify the genome and produce something arguably not human? Does it have human rights? — noAxioms
At what point did we become people and not some ape? — noAxioms
It brings to mind the arguments 200 years ago that black people were not people, hence being a emotionally satisfying position that justified their cruel treatment. — noAxioms
So at what point does that potential get realized and what's a being? — khaled
There is cohesive form. — neonspectraltoast
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