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    To genuinely remember an experience is to remember one's ... — Carmelics
    Home/Personal Identity
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    Challenges→The memory criterion for personal identity is circular and therefore uninformative as a sufficient condition for persistence.

    To genuinely remember an experience is to remember one's own experience — memory is factive and first-personal.

    Personal Identity
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    A criterion for personal identity cannot presuppose the answer to the very quest...Determining whether Blott's apparent memory of Clott's experience counts as genu...The memory criterion for personal identity is circular and therefore uninformati...

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    Determining whether Blott's apparent memory of Clott's experience coun...83%All experience is personal — there are no free-floating experiences th...80%The memory criterion holds that personal identity requires the ability...80%Whether an experience is experienced as mine does not depend on someth...79%

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    Second, it seems to belong to the very idea of remembering that you can remember only your own experiences. To remember paying a fine (or the experience of it) is to remember yourself paying. That makes it trivial and uninformative to say that you are the person whose experiences you can remember—that memory continuity is sufficient for us to persist. It’s uninformative because you cannot know whether someone genuinely remembers a past experience without already knowing whether she is the one wh

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