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    It is not the recollection or ability to recall that make... — Carmelics
    Home/Personal Identity
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    Challenges→Memory is not a sufficient condition for personal identity

    It is not the recollection or ability to recall that makes one identical with the person who was witness or agent to the event

    Personal Identity
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    Personal Identity

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    Having an episodic memory of an event entails that one existed at the time of th...Memory is not a sufficient condition for personal identityOne might have performed an action without remembering it, yet still be the pers...

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    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    If a person at time tn does not episodically remember an event at time...82%We can know that a corpse resulting from a person's death cannot remem...77%If a person episodically remembers an event, that person must have exi...77%Semantic memory (e.g., knowing that Napoleon was defeated at Waterloo)...76%

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    SEP: reid-memory-identity
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    According to Reid, memory is neither necessary nor sufficient for personal identity, metaphysically speaking, despite the conceptual and evidential relations memory bears to personal identity. It is not a necessary condition because each us has been agent or witness to many events that we do not now remember. “I may have other good evidence of things which befell me, and which I do not remember: I know who bare me, and suckled me, but I do not remember these events” (Essays, 264). It is not a su

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