Selfless Persons: Goodness in an Impersonal World?

Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 76:143-159 (2015)
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Abstract

Mark Johnston takes reality to be wholly objective or impersonal, and aims to show that the inevitability of death does not obliterate goodness in such a naturalistic world. Crucial to his argument is the claim that there are no persisting selves. After critically discussing Johnston's arguments, I set out a view of persons that shares Johnston's view that there are no selves, but disagrees about the prospects of goodness in a wholly impersonal world. On my view, a wholly objective world is ontologically incomplete: Persons have irreducible first-person properties. My aim is to show that we can reject selves, but that we can retain persons and their essential first-person properties as ontologically significant

Other Versions

reprint Baker, Lynne Rudder (2015) "Selfless persons: Goodness in an impersonal world?". In O'Hear, Anthony, Mind, Self and Person, pp. : Cambridge University Press (2015)

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Lynne Rudder Baker
PhD: Vanderbilt University; Last affiliation: University of Massachusetts, Amherst

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