
Identity Formation: What makes us who we are?"
We have some notion of who we are and who other people are, namely our own identity and the identity of other people. When and how does that form? How does it change over time? Why am I me and not someone else?
You might have heard of the teletransport paradox. Suppose we had a device that could move you from A to B by recreating you atom by atom at B and getting rid of the original at A. Would the person at the destination still be you?
The philosophy of identity raises questions about physical and psychological continuity, social versus self-determination, the notion of a fixed core/soul, and much more.
Am I still the same person?
What, if anything, holds together as we change, and whether memory is the thread running through it all.
- What roles does memory play in our identity?
- What happens when we lose our memory?
- At what point, if any, do we become a different person?
- How much do we actually change over time?
- Is there some core part of us that roughly stays the same no matter what?
Do I need a body to be me?
Whether the self is bound to this particular body, or could carry on in some other form.
- Does our identity depend on a physical body?
- What would happen if a technology allowed us to upload our consciousness to a digital environment?
What made me who I am?
How much of us is chosen, how much inherited, and how much simply the luck of what happened to us.
- How much can we influence who we are?
- How much do random events determine who we are?
- What role do genetics and environment play?
Where do I belong?
How the families, cultures, and groups we're part of become part of us.
- How much of our identity is given to us by family, culture, nation, language, or generation?
- Can we choose our group belongings, or are some simply assigned to us?
- What happens to identity when we leave a group, whether through migration, exile, conversion, or estrangemen
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