Organisms and Personal Identity

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A01=A.M. Ferner
Aristotle's Hylomorphism
Author_A.M. Ferner
biological anti-reductionism
Boylean Corpusculareanism
Brain Transplantation
Category=PDR
Category=QD
Category=QDHR
Conceptual Consilience
conceptualist realism in metaphysics
Concrete Universal
debate
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
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Mereological Simples
metaphysical individuation
Metaphysical Reductionism
Michael Losonsky
Natural Kind Word
Nominal Essences
Ontological Dependence
Persistence Conditions
Personal Identity Debate
personal identity metaphysics
philosophy of biology
Pre-theoretical Concepts
Pre-theoretical Framework
Sortal Dependency
sortal theory
Spatio Temporal
Spatio Temporal Continuity
Strawsonian Argument
substance ontology
Substance Sortal
Vice Versa
Wiggins's Project
Wiggins's Texts
Wiggins's View
Wiggins's Work
wigginss
Wiggins’s Project
Wiggins’s Texts
Wiggins’s View
work

Product details

  • ISBN 9781848935730
  • Weight: 521g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 23 Mar 2016
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Over his philosophical career, David Wiggins has produced a body of work that, though varied and wide-ranging, stands as a coherent and carefully integrated whole. In this book Ferner examines Wiggins’ conceptualist-realism, his sortal theory ‘D’ and his human being theory in order to assess how far these elements of his systematic metaphysics connect.

In addition to rectifying misinterpretations and analysing the relations between Wiggins’ works, Ferner reveals the importance of the philosophy of biology to Wiggins’ approach. This book elucidates the biological anti-reductionism present in Wiggins’ work and highlights how this stance stands as a productive alternative to emergentism. With an analysis of Wiggins’ construal of substances, specifically organisms, the book goes on to discuss how Wiggins brings together the concept of a person with the concept of a natural substance, or human being.

An extensive introduction to the work of David Wiggins, as well as a contribution to the dialogue between personal identity theorists and philosophers of biology, this book will appeal to students and scholars working in the areas of philosophy, biology and the history of Anglophone metaphysics.

Adam M. Ferner has worked in academic philosophy in France and the UK, and in schools and youth centres around London. He has written two books – Think Differently (2018) and Organisms and Personal Identity (2016) – and has two more on the way. He has been a regular contributor to philosophy journals and magazines including The Philosophy Magazine. Adam currently works at the Royal Institute of Philosophy in London.

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