The criterion of personal identity is clearly called into question by the project to perform a human head transplant. Is identity provided by psychological continuity alone, or does it depend on bodily continuity as well? And how do these different perspectives interface with our notion of mind and mind-body relationship? The reader will be provided with a discussion concerning these problems, together with a philosophical and literary survey about the conception of body-mind relationship from the Greek thought to contemporary philosophy. The analysis will conclude with a discussion concerning the possibility to consider the issue of personal identity from a statistic point of view, which privileges the general perception of identity, so as it has been shaped by the cultural trends of the last four centuries. It could hence be argued that personal identity is not something which can be defined once and for all. On the contrary, the general perception of identity is subject to significant alterations resulting from one's cultural environment. However, the cultural environment itself can be changed by particularly notable events, such as, hypothetically, the successful outcome of a human head transplant.

Head Transplant and Personal Identity : a Philosophical and Literary Survey / G. Mori. - In: CNS NEUROSCIENCE & THERAPEUTICS. - ISSN 1755-5930. - 22:4(2016), pp. 275-279.

Head Transplant and Personal Identity : a Philosophical and Literary Survey

G. Mori
2016

Abstract

The criterion of personal identity is clearly called into question by the project to perform a human head transplant. Is identity provided by psychological continuity alone, or does it depend on bodily continuity as well? And how do these different perspectives interface with our notion of mind and mind-body relationship? The reader will be provided with a discussion concerning these problems, together with a philosophical and literary survey about the conception of body-mind relationship from the Greek thought to contemporary philosophy. The analysis will conclude with a discussion concerning the possibility to consider the issue of personal identity from a statistic point of view, which privileges the general perception of identity, so as it has been shaped by the cultural trends of the last four centuries. It could hence be argued that personal identity is not something which can be defined once and for all. On the contrary, the general perception of identity is subject to significant alterations resulting from one's cultural environment. However, the cultural environment itself can be changed by particularly notable events, such as, hypothetically, the successful outcome of a human head transplant.
No
English
Dualism; Head transplant; Monism; Perception and Personal Identity
Settore M-FIL/06 - Storia della Filosofia
Review essay
Esperti anonimi
Pubblicazione scientifica
2016
Wiley
22
4
275
279
5
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Head Transplant and Personal Identity : a Philosophical and Literary Survey / G. Mori. - In: CNS NEUROSCIENCE & THERAPEUTICS. - ISSN 1755-5930. - 22:4(2016), pp. 275-279.
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Article (author)
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G. Mori
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/581878
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