Nurana Rajabova considers why, according to John Locke, you continue to be you.
This is the point I keep making in regard to "here and now". Depending on when you were born historically and on the culture able to fill your head with all manner of moral and political prejudices as a child, your identity is shaped and molded by things and by people that were often completely beyond your control.Identity Principles
Before delving into Locke’s position on personal identity, it will be helpful to consider his principles regarding the identity or sameness of things in general. In his Essay Concerning Human Understanding, Locke offers us two main principles in determining the identity or unity of things. One is the time and location principle: at any given time, one thing can exist at one place only.
Thus, many of the "principles" involved here are themselves no less rooted existentially in dasein.
On the other hand...
Still, chairs of all shapes and sizes existed, exist and will no doubt continue to exist on into the future in all manner of locations down through the ages and in most cultures. But chairs aren't people. Chairs don't congregate in philosophy forums to explore their own existence. Their own nature. Their obligations and responsibilities around other chairs.The same thing cannot possibly exist in two or more places at the same time. Suppose you see a chair in the front yard right at the moment. At the same time, you also see an identical chair five meters away. Despite looking identical, these two items being in different locations at the same time make you conclude that these are separate things.
What's tricky about the human Self/"self" is the part that revolves around dasein in a free will world.
And it all seems reasonable until you get to us...the human species. With the Benjamin Button Syndrome alone we can note just how awash human beings are in sets of circumstances that, embedded in conflicting goods, really are understood basically from subjective/intersubjective perspectives that have everything to do identity at the historical and cultural intersection of conflicting value judgments and political economy.However, if you happened to see only one chair in the front yard in the morning, and two hours later you saw an identical chair in the backyard, you could easily assume that it’s the same chair you’d seen in the front yard in the morning. Someone possibly moved it. Locke concludes:
“It being impossible for two things of the same kind to be or exist in the same instant, in the very same place; or one and the same thing in different places. That therefore, that had one beginning, is the same thing; and that which had a different beginning in time and place from that, is not the same, but diverse.”
With people there are always going to be things that seem applicable to all of us. And that's because for all practical purposes they are. Here and now or there and then. Instead, it is in regard to value judgements that "here and now" self can become very much at odds with other "there and then" selves.