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Man
Knows Himself by His Consciousness
by John Locke
. . . . To find wherein personal identity
consists, we must consider what person
stands for -- which, I think, is a thinking
intelligent being, that has reason and reflection,
and can consider itself as itself, the same
thinking thing, in different times and places;
which it does only by that consciousness which is
inseparable from thinking, and, as it seems to me,
essential to it: it being impossible for any one to
perceive without perceiving that he does
perceive. When we see, hear, smell, taste, feel,
meditate, or will anything, we know that we do so.
Thus it is always as to our present sensations and
perceptions: and by this every one is to himself
that which he calls self -- it not being
considered, in this case, whether the same self be
continued in the same or divers substances. For,
since consciousness always accompanies thinking,
and it is that which makes every one to be what he
calls self, and thereby distinguishes himself from
all other thinking things, in this alone consists
personal identity, i.e. the sameness of a rational
being: and as far as this consciousness can be
extended backwards to any past action or thought,
so far reaches the identity of that person; it is
the same self now it was then; and it is by the
same self with this present one that now reflects
on it, that that action was done.
But it is further inquired, whether it be the
same identical substance. This few would think they
had reason to doubt of, if these perceptions, with
their consciousness, always remained present in the
mind, whereby the same thinking thing would be
always consciously present, and, as would be
thought, evidently the same to itself. But that
which seems to make the difficulty is this, that
this consciousness being interrupted always by
forgetfulness, there being no moment of our lives
wherein we have the whole train of all our past
actions before our eyes in one view, but even the
best memories losing the sight of one part whilst
they are viewing another; and we sometimes, and
that the greatest part of our lives, not reflecting
on our past selves, being intent on our present
thoughts, and in sound sleep having no thoughts at
all, or at least none with that consciousness which
remarks our waking thoughts -- I say, in all these
cases, our consciousness being interrupted, and we
losing the sight of our past selves, doubts are
raised whether we are the same thinking thing, i.e.
the same substance or no. Which, however
reasonable or unreasonable, concerns not
personal identity at all. The question being
what makes the same person; and not whether it be
the same identical substance, which always thinks
in the same person, which, in this case, matters
not at all: different substances, by the same
consciousness (where they do partake in it) being
united into one person, as well as different bodies
by the same life are united into one animal, whose
identity is preserved in that change of substances
by the unity of one continued life. For, it being
the same consciousness that makes a man be himself
to himself, personal identity depends on that only,
whether it be annexed solely to one individual
substance, or can be continued in a succession of
several substances. For as far as any intelligent
being can repeat the idea of any past action
with the same consciousness it had of it at first,
and with the same consciousness it has of any
present action; so far it is the same personal
self. For it is by the consciousness it has of its
present thoughts and actions, that it is self to
itself now, and so will be the same self, as
far as the same consciousness can extend to actions
past or to come; and would be by distance of time,
or change of substance, no more two persons, than a
man be two men by wearing other clothes to-day than
he did yesterday, with a long or a short sleep
between: the same consciousness uniting those
distant actions into the same person, whatever
substances contributed to their production.
That this is so, we have some kind of evidence
in our very bodies, all whose particles, whilst
vitally united to this same thinking conscious
self, so that we feel when they are touched,
and are affected by, and conscious of good or harm
that happens to them, are a part of ourselves; i.e.
of our thinking conscious self. Thus, the limbs of
his body are to every one a part of himself; he
sympathizes and is concerned for them. Cut off a
hand, and thereby separate it from that
consciousness he had of its heat, cold, and other
affections, and it is then no longer a part of that
which is himself, any more than the remotest part
of matter. Thus, we see the substance
whereof personal self consisted at one time may be
varied at another, without the change of personal
identity; there being no question about the same
person, though the limbs which but now were a part
of it, be cut off.
But the question is, Whether if the same
substance which thinks be changed, it can be the
same person; or, remaining the same, it can be
different persons?
And to this I answer: First, This can be no
question at all to those who place thought in a
purely material animal constitution, void of an
immaterial substance. For, whether their
supposition be true or no, it is plain they
conceive personal identity preserved in something
else than identity of substance; as animal identity
is preserved in identity of life, and not of
substance. And therefore those who place thinking
in an immaterial substance only, before they can
come to deal with these men, must show why personal
identity cannot be preserved in the change of
immaterial substances, or variety of particular
immaterial substances, as well as animal identity
is preserved in the change of material substances,
or variety of particular bodies: unless they will
say, it is one immaterial spirit that makes the
same life in brutes, as it is one immaterial spirit
that makes the same person in men . . .
But next, as to the first part of the question,
Whether, if the same thinking substance (supposing
immaterial substances only to think) be changed, it
can be the same person? I answer, that cannot be
resolved but by those who know there can what kind
of substances they are that do think; and whether
the consciousness of past actions can be
transferred from one thinking substance to another.
I grant were the same consciousness the same
individual action it could not: but it being a
present representation of a past action, why it may
not be possible, that that may be represented to
the mind to have been which really never was, will
remain to be shown. And therefore how far the
consciousness of past actions is annexed to any
individual agent, so that another cannot possibly
have it, will be hard for us to determine, till we
know what kind of action it is that cannot be done
without a reflex act of perception accompanying it,
and how performed by thinking substances, who
cannot think without being conscious of it. But
that which we call the same consciousness, not
being the same individual act, why one intellectual
substance may not have represented to it, as done
by itself, what it never did, and was
perhaps done by some other agent -- why, I say,
such a representation may not possibly be without
reality of matter of fact, as well as several
representations in dreams are, which yet whilst
dreaming we take for true -- will be difficult to
conclude from the nature of things. . . . But yet,
to return to the question before us, it must be
allowed, that, if the same consciousness . . . can
be transferred from one thinking substance to
another, it will be possible that two thinking
substances may make but one person. For the same
consciousness being preserved, whether in the same
or different substances, the personal identity is
preserved.
As to the second part of the question, Whether
the same immaterial substance remaining, there may
be two distinct persons; which question seems to me
to be built on this, -- Whether the same immaterial
being, being conscious of the action of its past
duration, may be wholly stripped of all the
consciousness of its past existence, and lose it
beyond the power of ever retrieving it again: and
so as it were beginning a new account from a new
period, have a consciousness that cannot
reach beyond this new state. All those who hold
pre-existence are evidently of this mind; since
they allow the soul to have no remaining
consciousness of what it did in that pre-existent
state, either wholly separate from body, or
informing any other body; and if they should not,
it is plain experience would be against them. So
that personal identity, reaching no further than
consciousness reaches, a pre-existent spirit not
having continued so many ages in a state of
silence, must needs make different persons. . . . I
once met with one, who was persuaded his had been
the soul of Socrates . . . would any one
say, that he, being not conscious of any of
Socrates's actions or thoughts, could be the same
person with Socrates? Let any one reflect
upon himself, and conclude that he has in himself
an immaterial spirit, which is that which thinks in
him, and, in the constant change of his body keeps
him the same: and is that which he calls
himself: let his also suppose it to be the
same soul that was in Nestor or Thersites, at the
siege of Troy, . . . which it may have been, as
well as it is now the soul of any other man: but he
now having no consciousness of any of the actions
either of Nestor or Thersites, does or can he
conceive himself the same person with either of
them? Can he be concerned in either of their
actions? attribute them to himself, or think them
his own more than the actions of any other men that
ever existed? So that this consciousness, not
reaching to any of the actions of either of those
men, he is no more one self with either of
them than of the soul of immaterial spirit that now
informs him had been created, and began to exist,
when it began to inform his present body; though it
were never so true, that the same spirit
that informed Nestor's or Thersites' body were
numerically the same that now informs his. For this
would no more make him the same person with Nestor,
than if some of the particles of smaller that were
once a part of Nestor were now a part of this man
the same immaterial substance, without the same
consciousness, no more making the same person, by
being united to any body, than the same particle of
matter, without consciousness, united to any body,
makes the same person. But let him once find
himself conscious of any of the actions of Nestor,
he then finds himself the same person with Nestor.
. . .
But though the same immaterial substance or soul
does not alone, wherever it be, and in whatsoever
state, make the same man; yet it is plain
[that] consciousness, as far as ever it can
be extended -- should it be to ages past -- unites
existences and actions very remote in time into the
same person, as well as it does the
existences and actions of the immediately preceding
moment: so that whatever has the consciousness of
present and past actions, is the same person to
whom they both belong. Had I the same consciousness
that I saw the ark and Noah's flood, as that I saw
an overflowing of the Thames last winter, or as
that I write now, I could no more doubt that I who
write this now, that saw the Thames overflowed last
winter, and that viewed the flood at the general
deluge, was the same self -- place that self
in what substance you please -- than that I
who write this am the same myself now whilst
I write (whether I consist of all the same
substance material or immaterial, or no) that I was
yesterday. For as to this point of being the same
self, it matters not whether this present self be
made up of the same or other substances -- I being
as much concerned, and as justly accountable for
any action that was done a thousand years since,
appropriated to me now by this self-consciousness,
as I am for what I did the last moment.
Self is that conscious thinking thing --
whatever substance made up of, (whether spiritual
or material, simple or compounded, it matters
not)--which is sensible or conscious of pleasure
and pain, capable of happiness or misery, and so is
concerned for itself, as far as that consciousness
extends. Thus every one finds that, whilst
comprehended under that consciousness, the little
finger is as much a part of himself as what is most
so. Upon separation of this little finger, should
this consciousness go along with the little finger,
and leave the rest of the body, it is evident the
little finger would be the person, the same person;
and self then would have nothing to do with the
rest of the body. As in this case it is the
consciousness that goes along with the substance,
when one part is separate from another, which makes
the same person, and constitutes this inseparable
self: so it is in reference to substances remote in
time. That with which the consciousness of this
present thinking thing can join itself,
makes the same person, and is one self with it, and
with nothing else; and so attributes to itself, and
owns all the actions of that thing, as its own, as
far as that consciousness reaches, and no further;
as every one who reflects will perceive.
In this personal identity is founded all the
right and justice of reward and punishment;
happiness and misery being that for which every one
is concerned for himself, and not mattering
what becomes of any substance, not joined
to, or affected with that consciousness. For, as it
is evident in the instance I gave but now, if the
consciousness went along with the little finger
when it was cut off, that would be the same self
which was concerned for the whole body yesterday,
as making part of itself, whose actions then it
cannot but admit as its own now. Though, if the
same body should still live, and immediately from
the separation of the little finger have its own
peculiar consciousness, whereof the little finger
knew nothing, it would not at all be concerned for
it, as a part of itself, or could own any of its
actions, or have any of them imputed to him.
This may show us wherein personal identity
consists: not in the identity of substance, but, as
I have said, in the identity of consciousness,
wherein if Socrates and the present mayor of
Queenborough agree, they are the same person: if
the same Socrates waking and sleeping do not
partake of the same consciousness, Socrates waking
and sleeping is not the same person. And to punish
Socrates waking for what sleeping Socrates thought,
and waking Socrates was never conscious of, would
be no more of right, than to punish one twin for
what his brother-twin did, whereof he knew nothing,
because their outsides were so like, that they
could not be distinguished. . . .
But yet possibly it will still be objected --
Suppose I wholly lose the memory of some parts of
my life, beyond a possibility of retrieving them,
so that perhaps I shall never be conscious of them
again; yet am I not the same person that did those
actions, had those thoughts that I once was
conscious of, though I have now forgot them? To
which I answer, that we must here take notice what
the word I is applied to; which, in this
case, is the man only. And the same man
being presumed to be the same person, I is
easily here supposed to stand also for the same
person. But if it be possible for the same man to
have distinct incommunicable consciousness at
different times, it is past doubt the same man
would at different times make different persons;
which, we see, is the sense of mankind in the
solemnest declaration of their opinions, human laws
not punishing the mad man for the sober man's
actions, nor the sober man for what the mad man
did, thereby making them two persons: which is
somewhat explained by our way of speaking in
English when we say . . . one is 'not himself,' or
is 'beside himself'; in which phrases it is
insinuated, as if those who now, or at least first
used them, thought that self was changed; the
selfsame person was no longer in that man.
But yet it is hard to conceive that Socrates,
the same individual man, should be two persons. To
help us a little in this, we must consider what is
meant by . . . the same individual man.
First, it must be either the same individual,
immaterial, thinking substance; in short, the same
numerical soul, and nothing else.
Secondly, or the same animal, without any regard
to an immaterial soul.
Thirdly, or the same immaterial spirit united to
the same animal.
Now, take which of these suppositions you
please, it is impossible to make personal identity
to consist in anything but consciousness; or reach
any further than that does.
For, by the first of them, it must be allowed
possible that a man born of different women, and in
distant times, may be the same man. A way of
speaking which, whoever admits, must allow it
possible for the same man to be two distinct
persons, as any two that have lived in different
ages without the knowledge of one another's
thoughts.
By the second and third, Socrates, in this life
and after it, cannot be the same man any way, but
by the same consciousness; and so making human
identity to consist in the same thing wherein we
place personal identity, there will be difficulty
to allow the same man to be the same person. But
then they who place human identity in consciousness
only, and not in something else, must consider how
they will make the infant Socrates the same man
with Socrates after the resurrection. But
whatsoever to some men makes a man, and
consequently the same individual man, wherein
perhaps few are agreed, personal identity can by us
be placed in nothing but consciousness, (which is
that alone which makes what we call self)
without involving us in great absurdities.
But is not a man drunk and sober the same
person? why else is he punished for the fact he
commits when drunk, though he be never afterwards
conscious of it? Just as much the same person as a
man that walks, and does other things in his sleep,
is the same person, and is answerable for any
mischief he shall do in it. Human laws punish both,
with a justice suitable to their way of
knowledge -- because, in these cases, they cannot
distinguish certainly what is real, what
counterfeit: and so the ignorance in drunkenness or
sleep is not admitted as a plea. [For, though
punishment be annexed to personality, and
personality to consciousness, and the drunkard
perhaps be not conscious of what he did, yet human
judicatures justly punish him because the fact is
proved against him, but want of consciousness
cannot be proved for him.] . . . .
Nothing but consciousness can unite remote
existences into the same person: the identity of
substance will not do it; for whatever substance
there is, however framed, without consciousness
there is no person: and a carcass may be a person,
as well as any sort of substance be so, without
consciousness.
Could we suppose two distinct incommunicable
consciousnesses acting the same body, the one
constantly by day, the other by night; and, on the
other side, the same consciousness, acting by
intervals, two distinct bodies: I ask, in the first
case, whether the day and the night -- man would
not be two as distinct persons as Socrates and
Plato? And whether, in the second case, there would
not be one person in two distinct bodies, as much
as one man is the same in two distinct clothings?
Nor is it at all material to say, that this same,
and this distinct consciousness, in the cases above
mentioned, is owing to the same and distinct
immaterial substances, bringing it with them to
those bodies; which, whether true or no, alters not
the case: since it is evident the personal identity
would equally be determined by the consciousness,
whether that consciousness were annexed to some
individual immaterial substance or no. For,
granting that the thinking substance in man must be
necessarily supposed immaterial, it is evident that
[that] immaterial thinking thing may
sometimes part with its past consciousness, and be
restored to it again: as appears in the
forgetfulness men often have of their past actions;
and the mind many times recovers the memory of a
past consciousness, which it had lost for twenty
years together. Make these intervals of memory and
forgetfulness to take their turns regularly by day
and night, and you have two persons with the same
immaterial spirit, as much as in the former
instance two persons with the same body. So that
self is not determined by identity or diversity of
substance, which it cannot be sure of, but only by
identity of consciousness.
Indeed it may conceive the substance whereof it
is now made up to have existed formerly, united in
the same conscious being: but, consciousness
removed, that substance is no more itself, or makes
no more a part of it, than any other substance; as
is evident in the instance we have already given of
a limb cut off, of whose heat, or cold, or other
affections, having no longer any consciousness, it
is no more of a man's self than any other matter of
the universe. In like manner it will be in
reference to any immaterial substance, which is
void of that consciousness whereby I am myself to
myself: [if there be any part of its existence
which] I cannot upon recollection join with
that present consciousness whereby I am now myself,
it is, in that part of its existence, no more
myself than any other immaterial being. For,
whatsoever any substance has thought or done, which
I cannot recollect, and by my consciousness make my
own thought and action, it will no more belong to
me, whether a part of me thought or did it, than if
it had been thought or done by any other immaterial
being anywhere existing.
I agree, the more probable opinion is, that this
consciousness is annexed to, and the affection of,
one individual immaterial substance. But let men,
according to their diverse hypotheses, resolve of
that as they please. This every intelligent being,
sensible of happiness or misery, must grant -- that
there is something that is himself, that he
is concerned for, and would have happy; that this
self has existed in a continued duration more than
one instant, and therefore it is possible may
exist, as it has done, months and years to come,
without any certain bounds to be set to its
duration; and may be the same self, by the same
consciousness continued on for the future. And
thus, by this consciousness he finds himself to be
the same self which did such and such an action
some years since, by which he comes to be happy or
miserable now. In all which account of self, the
same numerical substance is not considered a
making the same self; but the same continued
consciousness, in which several substances
may have been united, and again separated from it,
which, whilst they continued in a vital union with
that wherein this consciousness then resided, made
a part of that same self. Thus any part of our
bodies, vitally united to that which is conscious
in us, makes a part of ourselves: but upon
separation from the vital union by which that
consciousness is communicated, that which a moment
since was part of ourselves, is now no more so than
a part of another man's self is a part of me: and
it is not impossible but in a little time may
become a real part of another person. And so we
have the same numerical substance become a part of
two different persons; and the same person
preserved under the change of various substances.
Could we suppose any spirit wholly stripped of all
its memory of consciousness of past actions, as we
find our minds always are of a great part of ours,
and sometimes of them all; the union or separation
of such a spiritual substance would make no
variation of personal identity, any more than that
of any particle of matter does. Any substance
vitally united to the present thinking being is a
part of that very same self which now is; anything
united to it by a consciousness of former actions,
makes also a part of the same self, which is the
same both then and now.
Person, as I take it, is the name for
this self. Wherever a man finds what he calls
himself, there, I think, another may say is the
same person. It is a forensic term, appropriating
actions and their merit; and so belongs only to
intelligent agents, capable of a law, and
happiness, and misery. This personality extends
itself beyond present existence to what is past,
only by consciousness, -- whereby it becomes
concerned and accountable; owns and imputes to
itself past actions, just upon the same ground and
for the same reason as it does the present. All
which is founded in a concern for happiness, the
unavoidable concomitant of consciousness; that
which is conscious of pleasure and pain, desiring
that that self that is conscious should be happy.
And therefore whatever past actions it cannot
reconcile or appropriate to that present
self by consciousness, it can be no more concerned
in than if they had never been done: and to receive
pleasure or pain, i.e. reward or punishment, on the
account of any such action, is all one as to be
made happy or miserable in its first being, without
any demerit at all. For, supposing a man
punished now for what he had done in another life,
whereof he could be made to have no consciousness
at all, what difference is there between that
punishment and being created miserable? And
therefore, conformable to this, the apostle tells
us, that, at the great day, when every one shall
'receive according to his doings, the secrets of
all hearts shall be laid open.' The sentence shall
be justified by the consciousness all persons shall
have, that they themselves, in what bodies
soever they appear, or what substances soever that
consciousness adheres to, are the same that
committed those actions, and deserve that
punishment for them. . . .
To conclude: Whatever substance begins to exist,
it must, during its existence, necessarily be the
same: whatever compositions of substances begin to
exist, during the union of those substances, the
concrete must be the same: whatsoever mode begins
to exist, during its existence it is the same: and
so if the composition be of distinct substances and
different modes, the same rule holds. Whereby it
will appear, that the difficulty or obscurity that
has been about this matter rather rises from the
names ill-used, than from any obscurity in things
themselves. For whatever makes the specific idea to
which the name is applied, if that idea be steadily
kept to, the distinction of anything into the same
and divers will easily be conceived, and there can
arise no doubt about it.
Excerpted from An Essay
Concerning Human Understanding, by John Locke
(1690), Book II, Chapter 27.
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in The Radical Academy: John Locke
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