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    An entity cannot operate on itself (irreflexivity princip... — Carmelics
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    Home/Modality & Possibility
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    Supports→The irreflexivity principle implies that the self, if it were the locus of control, could never seek to change its own state.

    An entity cannot operate on itself (irreflexivity principle).

    CausationModality & Possibility
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    Modality & PossibilityCausation

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    Free Will & Foreknowledge2 linked

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    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    Consciousness & Mind
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    Perception1 linked

    Related

    A knife cannot cut itself; a fingertip cannot touch itself.If the self is the controller, it falls under the irreflexivity principle.The irreflexivity principle implies that the self, if it were the locus of contr...

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    Determination is irreflexive: no property determines itself81%Movement is necessarily an irreflexive relation77%Formal entities cannot exist by themselves.77%It is a contradiction to say that an entity has the power to do someth...76%

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    AI-extracted
    SEP: buddha
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    Premise (1) is puzzling. It appears to presuppose that the self should have complete control over itself, so that it would effortlessly adjust its state to its desires. That the self should be thought of as the locus of control is certainly plausible. Those Indian self-theorists who claim that the self is a mere passive witness recognize that the burden of proof is on them to show that the self is not an agent. But it seems implausibly demanding to require of the self that it have complete contr

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