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Identity : essays based on Herbert Spencer lectures given in the University of Oxford / edited by Henry Harris

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Herbert Spencer lecture ; 1993Publication details: New York Clarendon Press. Oxford 1995Description: xi, 170 pages : illustrations ; 23 cmISBN:
  • 0198235259 (alk. paper)
  • 9780198235255 (alk. paper)
Subject(s): Genre/Form: DDC classification:
  • ARCH YNDC 126 H313I  20
LOC classification:
  • BF697 .I345 1995
Contents:
1. Identity and Identities / Bernard Williams -- 2. The Unimportance of Identity / Derek Parfit -- 3. An Experimentalist Looks at Identity / Henry Harris -- 4. Sexual Identity: Reality or Construction? / Michael Ruse -- 5. Fictional Identities / Terence Cave -- 6. The Formation of National Identity / Anthony D. Smith
Summary: The essays that follow offer perspectives from outside philosophy: Michael Ruse considers homosexual identity and to what extent it is reasonable to claim that homosexuality is a social construct. Terence Cave looks at personal identity through the eye of literature and fiction, and portrays identity as generated through the narratives that one weaves about oneself or about other people. Finally, Anthony D. Smith looks at national identities and how they are formed, analysing how this process is shaped by the interplay of cultural inheritance, political expediency, and mythSummary: Identity contains essays by six internationally famous contributors, focusing on different facets of identity from the viewpoints of their various disciplines. Two philosophers, Bernard Williams and Derek Parfit, discuss, respectively, numerical identity (when can we say that two phenomena observed at different times are one and the same thing?) and personal identity (how far can the concept of 'I' be stretched, and does it always matter whether we can say if that would still be me?). Henry Harris looks at philosophical discussions of identity from the perspective of an experimentalist, and discusses whether philosophical thought-experiments have any basis in scientific reality
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode
Archives Archives SAIACS Archives Room Yandell Collection ARCH YNDC 126 H313I (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Not for loan 061939

Includes bibliographical references (p. 155-164) and index

1. Identity and Identities / Bernard Williams -- 2. The Unimportance of Identity / Derek Parfit -- 3. An Experimentalist Looks at Identity / Henry Harris -- 4. Sexual Identity: Reality or Construction? / Michael Ruse -- 5. Fictional Identities / Terence Cave -- 6. The Formation of National Identity / Anthony D. Smith

The essays that follow offer perspectives from outside philosophy: Michael Ruse considers homosexual identity and to what extent it is reasonable to claim that homosexuality is a social construct. Terence Cave looks at personal identity through the eye of literature and fiction, and portrays identity as generated through the narratives that one weaves about oneself or about other people. Finally, Anthony D. Smith looks at national identities and how they are formed, analysing how this process is shaped by the interplay of cultural inheritance, political expediency, and myth

Identity contains essays by six internationally famous contributors, focusing on different facets of identity from the viewpoints of their various disciplines. Two philosophers, Bernard Williams and Derek Parfit, discuss, respectively, numerical identity (when can we say that two phenomena observed at different times are one and the same thing?) and personal identity (how far can the concept of 'I' be stretched, and does it always matter whether we can say if that would still be me?). Henry Harris looks at philosophical discussions of identity from the perspective of an experimentalist, and discusses whether philosophical thought-experiments have any basis in scientific reality

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