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Person

A person (pl.: people or persons, depending on context) is a being who has certain capacities or attributes such as reason, morality, consciousness or self-consciousness, and being a part of a culturally established form of social relations such as kinship, ownership of property, or legal responsibility.[1][2][3][4] The defining features of personhood and, consequently, what makes a person count as a person, differ widely among cultures and contexts.[5][6]

In addition to the question of personhood, of what makes a being count as a person to begin with, there are further questions about personal identity and self: both about what makes any particular person that particular person instead of another, and about what makes a person at one time the same person as they were or will be at another time despite any intervening changes.

The plural form "people" is often used to refer to an entire nation or ethnic group (as in "a people"), and this was the original meaning of the word; it subsequently acquired its use as a plural form of person. The plural form "persons" is often used in philosophical and legal writing.

Personhood

 
An abstract painting of a person by Paul Klee. The concept of a person can be very challenging to define.

The criteria for being a person... are designed to capture those attributes which are the subject of our most humane concern with ourselves and the source of what we regard as most important and most problematical in our lives.

— Harry G. Frankfurt

Personhood is the status of being a person. Defining personhood is a controversial topic in philosophy and law, and is closely tied to legal and political concepts of citizenship, equality, and liberty. According to common worldwide general legal practice, only a natural person or legal personality has rights, protections, privileges, responsibilities, and legal liability. Personhood continues to be a topic of international debate, and has been questioned during the abolition of slavery and the fight for women's rights, in debates about abortion, fetal rights, and in animal rights advocacy.[7][6]

Various debates have focused on questions about the personhood of different classes of entities. Historically, the personhood of women, and slaves has been a catalyst of social upheaval. In most societies today, postnatal humans are defined as persons. Likewise, certain legal entities such as corporations, sovereign states and other polities, or estates in probate are legally defined as persons.[8] However, some people believe that other groups should be included; depending on the theory, the category of "person" may be taken to include or not pre-natal humans or such non-human entities as animals, artificial intelligences, or extraterrestrial life.

Personal identity

 
What does it take for individuals to persist from moment to moment – or in other words, for the same individual to exist at different moments?

Personal identity is the unique identity of persons through time. That is to say, the necessary and sufficient conditions under which a person at one time and a person at another time can be said to be the same person, persisting through time. In the modern philosophy of mind, this concept of personal identity is sometimes referred to as the diachronic problem of personal identity. The synchronic problem is grounded in the question of what features or traits characterize a given person at one time.

Identity is an issue for both continental philosophy[citation needed] and analytic philosophy.[citation needed] A key question in continental philosophy is in what sense we can maintain the modern conception of identity, while realizing many of our prior assumptions about the world are incorrect.[citation needed]

Proposed solutions to the problem of personal identity include continuity of the physical body, continuity of an immaterial mind or soul, continuity of consciousness or memory,[9] the bundle theory of self,[10] continuity of personality after the death of the physical body,[11] and proposals that there are actually no persons or selves who persist over time at all.[citation needed]

Development of the concept

In ancient Rome, the word persona (Latin) or prosopon (πρόσωπον; Ancient Greek) originally referred to the masks worn by actors on stage. The various masks represented the various "personae" in the stage play.[12]

The concept of person was further developed during the Trinitarian and Christological debates of the 4th and 5th centuries in contrast to the word nature.[13] During the theological debates, some philosophical tools (concepts) were needed so that the debates could be held on common basis to all theological schools. The purpose of the debate was to establish the relation, similarities and differences between the logos (Ancient Greek: Λóγος, romanizedLógos/Verbum) and God. The philosophical concept of person arose, taking the word "prosopon" (Ancient Greek: πρόσωπον, romanizedprósōpon) from the Greek theatre. Therefore, the logos (the Ancient Greek: Λóγος, romanizedLógos/Verbum), which was identified with the Christ, was defined as a "person" of God. This concept was applied later to the Holy Ghost, the angels and to all human beings. Trinitarianism holds that God has three persons.

Since then, a number of important changes to the word's meaning and use have taken place, and attempts have been made to redefine the word with varying degrees of adoption and influence. According to Jörg Noller, at least six approaches can be distinguished:

  1. "The ontological definition of the person as "an individual substance of a rational nature" (Boethius).
  2. The self-consciousness-based definition of the person as a being that "can conceive itself as itself" (John Locke).
  3. The moral-philosophical definition of the person as "an end in itself" (Immanuel Kant). In current analytical debate, the focus has shifted to the relationship between bodily organism and person.
  4. The theory of animalism (Eric T. Olson) states that persons are essentially animals and that mental or psychological attributes play no role in their identity.
  5. Constitution theory (Lynne Baker), on the other hand, attempts to define the person as a natural and at the same time self-conscious being: the bodily organism constitutes the person without being identical to it. Rather, it forms with it a "unity without identity".
  6. [... Another idea] for conceiving the natural-rational unity of the person has emerged recently in the concept of the "person life" (Marya Schechtman)."[14]

Other theories attribute personhood to those states that are viewed to possess intrinsic or universal value. Value theory attempts to capture those states that are universally considered valuable by their nature, allowing one to assign the concept of personhood upon those states. For example, Chris Kelly argues that the value that is intuitively bestowed upon humans, their possessions, animals, and aspects of the natural environment is due to a value monism known as "richness." Richness, Kelly argues, is a product of the "variety" and the "unity" within an entity or agent. According to Kelly, human beings and animals are morally valued and entitled to the status of persons because they are complex organisms whose multitude of psychological and biological components are generally unified towards a singular purpose in any moment, existing and operating with relative harmony.[15]

Primus defines people exclusively as their desires, whereby desires are states which are sought for arbitrary or nil purpose(s). Primus views that desires, by definition, are each sought as ends in and of themselves and are logically the most precious (valuable) states that one can conceive. Primus distinguishes states of desire (or 'want') from states which are sought instrumentally, as a means to an end (on the basis of perceived 'need'). Primus' approach can thus be contrasted to Kant's moral-philosophical definition of a person: whereas Kant's second formulation of the categorical imperative states that rational beings must never be treated merely as a means to an end and that they must also always be treated as an end, Primus offers that the aspects that humans (and some animals) desire, and only those aspects, are ends, by definition.[16]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Personhood – Anthropology". Oxford Bibliographies.
  2. ^ De Craemer, Willy. "A Cross-Cultural Perspective on Personhood". The Milbank Memorial Fund Quarterly. Health and Society, vol. 61, no. 1, 1983, pp. 19–34..
  3. ^ Christian Smith. 2003. Moral, Believing Animals: Human Personhood and Culture. Oxford University Press
  4. ^ Carrithers, Michael, Steven Collins, and Steven Lukes, eds. 1985. The category of the person: Anthropology, philosophy, history. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge Univ. Press.
  5. ^ Richard A. Shweder/Edmund J. Bourne. 1982. Does the Concept of the Person Vary Cross-Culturally?, in: Anthony J. Marsella/Geoffrey M. White (eds), Cultural Conceptions of Mental Health and Therapy, Dordrecht, S. 97-137.
  6. ^ For a discussion of non-human personhood, see Midgley, Mary. "Persons and non-persons", in Peter Singer (ed.) In Defense of Animals. Basil Blackwell, 1985, pp. 52–62.
  7. ^ For corporations, see "Justices, 5–4, Reject Corporate Spending Limit", The New York Times, January 21, 2010.
  8. ^ Stefaroi, P. (2015). Humanistic Personology: A Humanistic-Ontological Theory of the Person & Personality. Applications in Therapy, Social Work, Education, Management and Art (Theatre). Charleston SC, USA: CreateSpace.
  9. ^ Nelson Pike (1967). Hume's Bundle Theory of the Self: A Limited Defense, American Philosophical Quarterly 4 (2), pp. 159-165.
  10. ^ For a discussion of post-mortal personhood, see Roth, S. (2013) "Dying is only human. The case death makes for the immortality of the person". Tamara Journal for Critical Organization Inquiry, Vol. 11, No. 2, pp. 35–39. [1]
  11. ^ Geddes, Leonard William (1911). "Person" . In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 11. New York: Robert Appleton Company. The Latin word persona was originally used to denote the mask worn by an actor. From this, it was applied to the role he assumed, and, finally, to any character on the stage of life, to any individual.
  12. ^ Thisleton NIGNTC commentary on 1 Corinthians "Thinkers in ancient times had a difficulty in expressing the notion of personality"; Barfield in History of English Words "Take, for instance, the word person...Its present meaning of an individual human being is largely due to the theologians who hit upon it when they were looking for some term that would enable them to assert the trinity of Godhead without admitting more than one 'substance'"; John Zizioulas in Being as Communion, 1985 New York: St Vladimirs Press p. 27 writes: "although the person and "personal identity" are widely discussed nowadays as a supreme ideal, nobody seems to recognize that historically as well as existentially the concept of the person is indissolubly bound up with theology."
  13. ^ Noller, Jörg (2019): Person. In: Kirchhoff, Thomas (Hg.): Online Encyclopedia Philosophy of Nature / Online Lexikon Naturphilosophie. Heidelberg, Universitätsbibliothek Heidelberg: https://doi.org/10.11588/oepn.2019.0.66403.
  14. ^ Kelly, Chris (2014-09-22). "Value Monism, Richness, And Environmental Ethics". Les ateliers de l'éthique. 9 (2): 110–129. doi:10.7202/1026681ar. ISSN 1718-9977. S2CID 145811343.
  15. ^ Primus (2020-05-23). "Purism: Logic as the basis of Morality". doi:10.33774/coe-2020-h2d4k-v2. S2CID 243600050. Retrieved 2021-12-08. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)

Further reading

  • Cornelia J. de Vogel (1963). The Concept of Personality in Greek and Christian Thought. In Studies in Philosophy and the History of Philosophy. Vol. 2. Edited by J. K. Ryan, Washington: Catholic University of America Press. pp. 20–
  • Grant, Patrick. Personalism and the Politics of Culture. New York: St Martin's Press 1996. ISBN 031216176X
  • Grant, Patrick. Spiritual Discourse and the Meaning of Persons. New York: St Martin's Press 1994. ISBN 031212077X
  • Grant, Patrick. Literature and Personal Values. London: MacMillan 1992. ISBN 1-349-22116-3
  • Lukes, Steven; Carrithers, Michael; Collins, Steven, eds. (1987). The Category of the Person: Anthropology, Philosophy, History. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-27757-4.
  • Puccetti, Roland (1968). Persons: A Study of Possible Moral Agents in the Universe. London: Macmillan and Company.
  • Stephens, William O. (2006). The Person: Readings in Human Nature. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson. ISBN 978-0-13-184811-5.
  • Korfmacher, Carsten (May 29, 2006). "Personal Identity". The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Retrieved 2011-03-09.
  • Jörg Noller (2019). Person. In: Thomas Kirchhoff (ed.): Online Encyclopedia Philosophy of Nature / Online Lexikon Naturphilosophie. Heidelberg, Universitätsbibliothek Heidelberg: https://doi.org/10.11588/oepn.2019.0.66403.
  • Eric T. Olson (2019). "Personal Identity". In: Edward N. Zalta (ed.): The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Fall 2019 Edition).

External links

  • (Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies)

person, human, people, human, other, uses, disambiguation, person, people, persons, depending, context, being, certain, capacities, attributes, such, reason, morality, consciousness, self, consciousness, being, part, culturally, established, form, social, rela. For human people see Human For other uses see Person disambiguation A person pl people or persons depending on context is a being who has certain capacities or attributes such as reason morality consciousness or self consciousness and being a part of a culturally established form of social relations such as kinship ownership of property or legal responsibility 1 2 3 4 The defining features of personhood and consequently what makes a person count as a person differ widely among cultures and contexts 5 6 In addition to the question of personhood of what makes a being count as a person to begin with there are further questions about personal identity and self both about what makes any particular person that particular person instead of another and about what makes a person at one time the same person as they were or will be at another time despite any intervening changes The plural form people is often used to refer to an entire nation or ethnic group as in a people and this was the original meaning of the word it subsequently acquired its use as a plural form of person The plural form persons is often used in philosophical and legal writing Contents 1 Personhood 2 Personal identity 3 Development of the concept 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksPersonhood nbsp An abstract painting of a person by Paul Klee The concept of a person can be very challenging to define Main article Personhood The criteria for being a person are designed to capture those attributes which are the subject of our most humane concern with ourselves and the source of what we regard as most important and most problematical in our lives Harry G Frankfurt Personhood is the status of being a person Defining personhood is a controversial topic in philosophy and law and is closely tied to legal and political concepts of citizenship equality and liberty According to common worldwide general legal practice only a natural person or legal personality has rights protections privileges responsibilities and legal liability Personhood continues to be a topic of international debate and has been questioned during the abolition of slavery and the fight for women s rights in debates about abortion fetal rights and in animal rights advocacy 7 6 Various debates have focused on questions about the personhood of different classes of entities Historically the personhood of women and slaves has been a catalyst of social upheaval In most societies today postnatal humans are defined as persons Likewise certain legal entities such as corporations sovereign states and other polities or estates in probate are legally defined as persons 8 However some people believe that other groups should be included depending on the theory the category of person may be taken to include or not pre natal humans or such non human entities as animals artificial intelligences or extraterrestrial life Personal identity nbsp What does it take for individuals to persist from moment to moment or in other words for the same individual to exist at different moments Main article Personal identity Personal identity is the unique identity of persons through time That is to say the necessary and sufficient conditions under which a person at one time and a person at another time can be said to be the same person persisting through time In the modern philosophy of mind this concept of personal identity is sometimes referred to as the diachronic problem of personal identity The synchronic problem is grounded in the question of what features or traits characterize a given person at one time Identity is an issue for both continental philosophy citation needed and analytic philosophy citation needed A key question in continental philosophy is in what sense we can maintain the modern conception of identity while realizing many of our prior assumptions about the world are incorrect citation needed Proposed solutions to the problem of personal identity include continuity of the physical body continuity of an immaterial mind or soul continuity of consciousness or memory 9 the bundle theory of self 10 continuity of personality after the death of the physical body 11 and proposals that there are actually no persons or selves who persist over time at all citation needed Development of the conceptIn ancient Rome the word persona Latin or prosopon proswpon Ancient Greek originally referred to the masks worn by actors on stage The various masks represented the various personae in the stage play 12 The concept of person was further developed during the Trinitarian and Christological debates of the 4th and 5th centuries in contrast to the word nature 13 During the theological debates some philosophical tools concepts were needed so that the debates could be held on common basis to all theological schools The purpose of the debate was to establish the relation similarities and differences between the logos Ancient Greek Logos romanized Logos Verbum and God The philosophical concept of person arose taking the word prosopon Ancient Greek proswpon romanized prosōpon from the Greek theatre Therefore the logos the Ancient Greek Logos romanized Logos Verbum which was identified with the Christ was defined as a person of God This concept was applied later to the Holy Ghost the angels and to all human beings Trinitarianism holds that God has three persons Since then a number of important changes to the word s meaning and use have taken place and attempts have been made to redefine the word with varying degrees of adoption and influence According to Jorg Noller at least six approaches can be distinguished The ontological definition of the person as an individual substance of a rational nature Boethius The self consciousness based definition of the person as a being that can conceive itself as itself John Locke The moral philosophical definition of the person as an end in itself Immanuel Kant In current analytical debate the focus has shifted to the relationship between bodily organism and person The theory of animalism Eric T Olson states that persons are essentially animals and that mental or psychological attributes play no role in their identity Constitution theory Lynne Baker on the other hand attempts to define the person as a natural and at the same time self conscious being the bodily organism constitutes the person without being identical to it Rather it forms with it a unity without identity Another idea for conceiving the natural rational unity of the person has emerged recently in the concept of the person life Marya Schechtman 14 Other theories attribute personhood to those states that are viewed to possess intrinsic or universal value Value theory attempts to capture those states that are universally considered valuable by their nature allowing one to assign the concept of personhood upon those states For example Chris Kelly argues that the value that is intuitively bestowed upon humans their possessions animals and aspects of the natural environment is due to a value monism known as richness Richness Kelly argues is a product of the variety and the unity within an entity or agent According to Kelly human beings and animals are morally valued and entitled to the status of persons because they are complex organisms whose multitude of psychological and biological components are generally unified towards a singular purpose in any moment existing and operating with relative harmony 15 Primus defines people exclusively as their desires whereby desires are states which are sought for arbitrary or nil purpose s Primus views that desires by definition are each sought as ends in and of themselves and are logically the most precious valuable states that one can conceive Primus distinguishes states of desire or want from states which are sought instrumentally as a means to an end on the basis of perceived need Primus approach can thus be contrasted to Kant s moral philosophical definition of a person whereas Kant s second formulation of the categorical imperative states that rational beings must never be treated merely as a means to an end and that they must also always be treated as an end Primus offers that the aspects that humans and some animals desire and only those aspects are ends by definition 16 See alsoAnimal liberation Animal rights Anthropocentrism Anthropology Beginning of human personhood Being Capitis deminutio Character Consciousness Corporate personhood Great Ape personhood Human Hypostasis philosophy and religion Identity Individual Immanuel Kant Juridical person Legal personality Legal fiction Natural person in French law Nonperson People Person Catholic canon law Personality Personhood movement Personoid Phenomenology Subject philosophy Surety Theory of mind Value TheoryReferences Personhood Anthropology Oxford Bibliographies De Craemer Willy A Cross Cultural Perspective on Personhood The Milbank Memorial Fund Quarterly Health and Society vol 61 no 1 1983 pp 19 34 Christian Smith 2003 Moral Believing Animals Human Personhood and Culture Oxford University Press Carrithers Michael Steven Collins and Steven Lukes eds 1985 The category of the person Anthropology philosophy history Cambridge UK Cambridge Univ Press Richard A Shweder Edmund J Bourne 1982 Does the Concept of the Person Vary Cross Culturally in Anthony J Marsella Geoffrey M White eds Cultural Conceptions of Mental Health and Therapy Dordrecht S 97 137 a b U S Judge Rules Pablo Escobar s Cocaine Hippos Should Have Legal Rights Time magazine October 25 2021 Archived from the original on 26 Oct 2021 Retrieved 2021 10 25 For a discussion of non human personhood see Midgley Mary Persons and non persons in Peter Singer ed In Defense of Animals Basil Blackwell 1985 pp 52 62 For corporations see Justices 5 4 Reject Corporate Spending Limit The New York Times January 21 2010 Stefaroi P 2015 Humanistic Personology A Humanistic Ontological Theory of the Person amp Personality Applications in Therapy Social Work Education Management and Art Theatre Charleston SC USA CreateSpace Nelson Pike 1967 Hume s Bundle Theory of the Self A Limited Defense American Philosophical Quarterly 4 2 pp 159 165 For a discussion of post mortal personhood see Roth S 2013 Dying is only human The case death makes for the immortality of the person Tamara Journal for Critical Organization Inquiry Vol 11 No 2 pp 35 39 1 Geddes Leonard William 1911 Person In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 11 New York Robert Appleton Company The Latin word persona was originally used to denote the mask worn by an actor From this it was applied to the role he assumed and finally to any character on the stage of life to any individual Thisleton NIGNTC commentary on 1 Corinthians Thinkers in ancient times had a difficulty in expressing the notion of personality Barfield in History of English Words Take for instance the word person Its present meaning of an individual human being is largely due to the theologians who hit upon it when they were looking for some term that would enable them to assert the trinity of Godhead without admitting more than one substance John Zizioulas in Being as Communion 1985 New York St Vladimirs Press p 27 writes although the person and personal identity are widely discussed nowadays as a supreme ideal nobody seems to recognize that historically as well as existentially the concept of the person is indissolubly bound up with theology Noller Jorg 2019 Person In Kirchhoff Thomas Hg Online Encyclopedia Philosophy of Nature Online Lexikon Naturphilosophie Heidelberg Universitatsbibliothek Heidelberg https doi org 10 11588 oepn 2019 0 66403 Kelly Chris 2014 09 22 Value Monism Richness And Environmental Ethics Les ateliers de l ethique 9 2 110 129 doi 10 7202 1026681ar ISSN 1718 9977 S2CID 145811343 Primus 2020 05 23 Purism Logic as the basis of Morality doi 10 33774 coe 2020 h2d4k v2 S2CID 243600050 Retrieved 2021 12 08 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Further readingCornelia J de Vogel 1963 The Concept of Personality in Greek and Christian Thought In Studies in Philosophy and the History of Philosophy Vol 2 Edited by J K Ryan Washington Catholic University of America Press pp 20 Grant Patrick Personalism and the Politics of Culture New York St Martin s Press 1996 ISBN 031216176X Grant Patrick Spiritual Discourse and the Meaning of Persons New York St Martin s Press 1994 ISBN 031212077X Grant Patrick Literature and Personal Values London MacMillan 1992 ISBN 1 349 22116 3 Lukes Steven Carrithers Michael Collins Steven eds 1987 The Category of the Person Anthropology Philosophy History Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 27757 4 Puccetti Roland 1968 Persons A Study of Possible Moral Agents in the Universe London Macmillan and Company Stephens William O 2006 The Person Readings in Human Nature Upper Saddle River NJ Pearson ISBN 978 0 13 184811 5 Korfmacher Carsten May 29 2006 Personal Identity The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 2011 03 09 Jorg Noller 2019 Person In Thomas Kirchhoff ed Online Encyclopedia Philosophy of Nature Online Lexikon Naturphilosophie Heidelberg Universitatsbibliothek Heidelberg https doi org 10 11588 oepn 2019 0 66403 Eric T Olson 2019 Personal Identity In Edward N Zalta ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Fall 2019 Edition External links nbsp Look up person in Wiktionary the free dictionary Rights of Non Human Persons Program Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Person amp oldid 1194831745, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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