Lecture Description
The personality theory is revised to state that the key to personal identity is having the same personality provided that there is no branching, that is, provided there is no transfer or duplication of the same personality from one body to another. Similar "no branching" requirements are added to the other theories as well. At the end of class, Professor Kagan suggests a shift from thinking about the survival of the soul in terms of "what does it take to survive?" to "what is it that matters in survival?".
Course Index
- Course Introduction
- The Nature of Persons: Dualism vs. Physicalism
- Arguments for the Existence of the Soul, Part I
- Introduction to Plato's Phaedo; Arguments for the existence of the soul, Part II
- Arguments for the existence of the soul, Part III: Free will and near-death experiences
- Arguments for the existence of the soul, Part IV; Plato, Part I
- Plato, Part II: Arguments for the immortality of the soul
- Plato, Part III: Arguments for the immortality of the soul (cont.)
- Plato, Part IV: Arguments for the immortality of the soul (cont.)
- Personal identity, Part I: Identity across space and time and the soul theory
- Personal identity, Part II: The body theory and the personality theory
- Personal identity, Part III: Objections to the personality theory
- Personal identity, Part IV; What matters?
- What matters (cont.); The nature of death, Part I
- The nature of death (cont.); Believing you will die
- Dying Alone; The Badness of Death, Part I
- The Badness of Death, Part II: The Deprivation Account
- The Badness of Death, Part III; Immortality, Part I
- Immortality Part II; The Value of Life, Part I
- The Value of Life, Part II; Other Bad Aspects of Death, Part I
- Other Bad Aspects of Death, Part II
- Fear of Death
- Suicide, Part I: The Rationality of Suicide
- Suicide, Part II: Deciding Under Uncertainty
- Suicide, Part III: The Morality of Suicide and Course Conclusion
Course Description
There is one thing I can be sure of: I am going to die. But what am I to make of that fact? This course will examine a number of issues that arise once we begin to reflect on our mortality. The possibility that death may not actually be the end is considered. Are we, in some sense, immortal? Would immortality be desirable? Also a clearer notion of what it is to die is examined. What does it mean to say that a person has died? What kind of fact is that? And, finally, different attitudes to death are evaluated. Is death an evil? How? Why? Is suicide morally permissible? Is it rational? How should the knowledge that I am going to die affect the way I live my life?