The Bounds of Agency: An Essay in Revisionary Metaphysics

The Bounds of Agency: An Essay in Revisionary Metaphysics

by Carol Rovane
The Bounds of Agency: An Essay in Revisionary Metaphysics

The Bounds of Agency: An Essay in Revisionary Metaphysics

by Carol Rovane

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Overview

The subject of personal identity is one of the most central and most contested and exciting in philosophy. Ever since Locke, psychological and bodily criteria have vied with one another in conflicting accounts of personal identity. Carol Rovane argues that, as things stand, the debate is unresolvable since both sides hold coherent positions that our common sense will embrace. Our very common sense, she maintains, is conflicted; so any resolution to the debate is bound to be revisionary. She boldly offers such a revisionary theory of personal identity by first inquiring into the nature of persons.

Rovane begins with a premise about the distinctive ethical nature of persons to which all substantive ethical doctrines, ranging from Kantian to egoist, can subscribe. From this starting point, she derives two startling metaphysical possibilities: there could be group persons composed of many human beings and multiple persons within a single human being. Her conclusion supports Locke's distinction between persons and human beings, but on altogether new grounds. These grounds lie in her radically normative analysis of the condition of personal identity, as the condition in which a certain normative commitment arises, namely, the commitment to achieve overall rational unity within a rational point of view. It is by virtue of this normative commitment that individual agents can engage one another specifically as persons, and possess the distinctive ethical status of persons.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781400822423
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Publication date: 12/22/1997
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 304
File size: 353 KB

About the Author

Carol Rovane is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Yale University.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Pt. I Lessons from Locke
Introduction to Part I 3
Ch. 1 Preview of the Normative Analysis of Personal Identity 13
1 Locke's Analysis 13
2 Rational Points of View 19
3 The Explanatory Goal of the Normative Analysis 26
4 Meeting the Explanatory Goal 29
5 A Final Comparison with Locke 32
Ch. 2 On the Need for Revision 35
1 What the Lockean Thought Experiments Really Show 40
2 The Conflict Is Not Merely Apparent 45
3 Neither Side of the Conflict Is Incoherent 49
4 Seeking Positive Reasons to Embrace One Side of the Conflict 59
Ch. 3 A Revisionary Proposal 65
1 What Are Agency-Regarding Relations? 74
2 The Ethical Criterion Meets All Three Constraints 99
Pt. II Personal Identity: The Body Practic
Introduction to Part II 127
Ch. 4 A Sufficient Condition for Personal Identity 136
1 The Case for Group Persons 137
2 Intra- and Interpersonal Relations 142
3 The Normative Analysis of Personal Identity: A First Full Statement 160
Ch. 5 The Sufficient Condition Is Also Necessary 167
1 A Rational Reconstruction of Multiple Personality Disorder 169
2 Justifying the Commitment to Overall Rational Unity 179
3 Some Remaining Metaphysical Issues 183
Ch. 6 The First Person 209
1 The Distinctive Features of the First Person 211
2 Self-Oriented Ethical Relations 232
Postscript 245
Bibliography 251
Index 255

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