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Who am I? A philosophical inquiry

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    Throughout the history of mankind,
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    three little words have sent poets
    to the blank page,
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    philosophers to the Agora,
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    and seekers to the oracles:
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    "Who am I?"
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    From the ancient Greek aphorism
    inscribed on the Temple of Apollo,
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    "Know thyself,"
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    to The Who's rock anthem, "Who Are You?"
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    philosophers, psychologists, academics,
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    scientists, artists,
    theologians and politicians
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    have all tackled the subject of identity.
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    Their hypotheses are widely varied
    and lack significant consensus.
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    These are smart, creative people,
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    so what's so hard about coming up
    with the right answer?
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    One challenge certainly lies
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    with the complex concept
    of the persistence of identity.
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    Which you is who?
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    The person you are today?
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    Five years ago?
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    Who you'll be in 50 years?
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    And when is "am"?
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    This week?
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    Today?
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    This hour?
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    This second?
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    And which aspect of you is "I"?
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    Are you your physical body?
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    Your thoughts and feelings?
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    Your actions?
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    These murky waters of abstract logic
    are tricky to navigate,
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    and so it's probably fitting
    that to demonstrate the complexity,
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    the Greek historian Plutarch
    used the story of a ship.
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    How are you "I"?
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    As the tale goes, Theseus, the mythical
    founder King of Athens,
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    single-handedly slayed
    the evil Minotaur at Crete,
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    then returned home on a ship.
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    To honor this heroic feat,
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    for 1000 years Athenians painstakingly
    maintained his ship in the harbor,
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    and annually reenacted his voyage.
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    Whenever a part of the ship
    was worn or damaged,
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    it was replaced with an identical piece
    of the same material
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    until, at some point,
    no original parts remained.
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    Plutarch noted the Ship of Theseus
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    was an example
    of the philosophical paradox
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    revolving around
    the persistence of identity.
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    How can every single part
    of something be replaced,
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    yet it still remains the same thing?
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    Let's imagine there are two ships:
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    the ship that Theseus
    docked in Athens, Ship A,
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    and the ship sailed by the Athenians
    1000 years later, Ship B.
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    Very simply, our question is this:
    does A equal B?
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    Some would say that for 1000 years
    there has been only one Ship of Theseus,
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    and because the changes made to it
    happened gradually,
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    it never at any point in time
    stopped being the legendary ship.
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    Though they have absolutely
    no parts in common,
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    the two ships are numerically identical,
    meaning one and the same,
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    so A equals B.
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    However, others could argue
    that Theseus never set foot on Ship B,
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    and his presence on the ship
    is an essential qualitative property
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    of the Ship of Theseus.
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    It cannot survive without him.
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    So, though the two ships
    are numerically identical,
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    they are not qualitatively identical.
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    Thus, A does not equal B.
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    But what happens
    when we consider this twist?
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    What if, as each piece
    of the original ship was cast off,
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    somebody collected them all,
    and rebuilt the entire original ship?
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    When it was finished, undeniably
    two physical ships would exist:
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    the one that's docked in Athens,
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    and the one in some guy's backyard.
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    Each could lay claim to the title,
    "The Ship of Theseus,"
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    but only would could actually
    be the real thing.
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    So which one is it,
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    and more importantly,
    what does this have to do with you?
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    Like the Ship of Theseus,
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    you are a collection of constantly
    changing parts:
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    your physical body, mind, emotions,
    circumstances, and even your quirks,
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    always changing, but still in an amazing
    and sometimes illogical way,
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    you stay the same, too.
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    This is one of the reasons that
    the question, "Who am I?" is so complex.
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    And in order to answer it,
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    like so many great minds before you,
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    you must be willing to dive into the
    bottomless ocean of philosophical paradox.
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    Or maybe you could just answer,
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    "I am a legendary hero sailing
    a powerful ship on an epic journey."
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    That could work, too.
Title:
Who am I? A philosophical inquiry
Speaker:
Amy Adkins
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
04:59
  • Hello. This is just to report a typo in the English transcript, at 3:52:

    "but only 'one' could actually
    be the real thing."

    Best regards.

  • Hi, the time code in English is completely wrong and messing up with other languages time codes. :(

  • Hi again, Sorry, now the time code is right on the editor, must have been some temporary technical issue. :)

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