Dr Alexander Geddes | University of Oxford
Alexander Geddes is currently Departmental Lecturer in Philosophy of Mind at the Faculty of Philosophy and St. Hilda's College, Oxford.
He previously held positions at Exeter College, Oxford; on the BUMP (Better Understanding the Metaphysics of Pregnancy) project at King's College London and Southampton; at the Centre for Philosophical Psychology, Antwerp; and at The Queen's College, Oxford. He received his PhD in Philosophy from University College London, a BPhil in Philosophy from Oriel College, Oxford, and a BA in Philosophy from King's College London.
Title | 'Personal Identity & the Preservation of Mind'
Abstract:
The apparent tension between the claim that I am this animal and the claim that I must go where my mind goes derives from cases in which it is thought that my mind goes somewhere yet this animal does not. But any judgement that a case in one in which this occurs will depend both on assumptions concerning what happens to this animal in the case and on assumptions concerning the mental facts in the case.
In this paper, I explore the grounds for the relevant assumptions concerning the mental facts in such cases. I argue that these assumptions rely on a certain view concerning the preservation of reference-involving mental properties; that other views are not only coherent but plausible; and that we need a principled reason for choosing any one of these views over the others.
Ultimately, I suggest, this prevents such cases from being used to generate the conflict identified above, allowing us to harmonise the claims that I am this animal and that I must go where my mind goes, without adopting any implausible commitments concerning the nature of this animal or the nature of mind.