Conventionalist Accounts of Personal Identity Over Time

David Mark Kovacs*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Conventionalism about personal identity over time is the view that personal identity is in some sense dependent on our beliefs, desires, social practices, or language use (collectively: on our “conventions”). This paper provides an opinionated survey of the state of the art about personal identity conventionalism. First, it offers a taxonomy of possible types of conventionalism along four different axes and discusses weak vs. strong, private vs. public, doxastic vs. non-doxastic, and realizer-relative vs. assessor-relative varieties of conventionalism. Second, it reviews the main sources of motivation for conventionalism about personal identity: methodological, epistemological, and normative motivations. Third, it maps out the place of conventionalism in logical space and distinguishes it from related philosophical theses: personal identity pluralism, indeterminacy about personal identity, revisionism, and self-concern relativism. Finally, some potential avenues for future research are considered.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere13016
JournalPhilosophy Compass
Volume19
Issue number8
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 2024

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