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  1. Self-interest and interest in selves.Susan Wolf - 1986 - Ethics 96 (July):704-20.
  • Friends and future selves.Jennifer Whiting - 1986 - Philosophical Review 95 (4):547-80.
  • Self to Self.J. David Velleman - 1996 - Philosophical Review 105 (1):39-76.
    Images of myself being Napoleon can scarcely merely be images of the physical figure of Napoleon.... They will rather be images of, for instance, the desolation at Austerlitz as viewed by me vaguely aware of my short stature and my cockaded hat, my hand in my tunic.
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  • Love as a moral emotion.J. David Velleman - 1999 - Ethics 109 (2):338-374.
  • Personhood and personal identity.Marya Schechtman - 1990 - Journal of Philosophy 87 (2):71-92.
  • Branching self-consciousness.Carol Rovane - 1990 - Philosophical Review 99 (3):355-95.
  • Can amoebae divide without multiplying?Denis Robinson - 1985 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 63 (3):299 – 319.
  • The Human Animal: Personal Identity Without Psychology.Eric Todd Olson - 1997 - New York, US: Oxford University Press.
    Most philosophers writing about personal identity in recent years claim that what it takes for us to persist through time is a matter of psychology. In this groundbreaking new book, Eric Olson argues that such approaches face daunting problems, and he defends in their place a radically non-psychological account of personal identity. He defines human beings as biological organisms, and claims that no psychological relation is either sufficient or necessary for an organism to persist. Olson rejects several famous thought-experiments dealing (...)
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  • Dividing without reducing: Bodily fission and personal identity.Eugene O. Mills - 1993 - Mind 102 (405):37-51.
  • Fission rejuvenation.Raymond Martin - 1995 - Philosophical Studies 80 (1):17-40.
  • Philosophical papers.David Kellogg Lewis - 1983 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    This is the second volume of philosophical essays by one of the most innovative and influential philosophers now writing in English. Containing thirteen papers in all, the book includes both new essays and previously published papers, some of them with extensive new postscripts reflecting Lewis's current thinking. The papers in Volume II focus on causation and several other closely related topics, including counterfactual and indicative conditionals, the direction of time, subjective and objective probability, causation, explanation, perception, free will, and rational (...)
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  • Human Beings.Christopher Gill - 1992 - Philosophical Quarterly 42 (169):502-504.
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  • Human Beings.David Cockburn (ed.) - 1991 - Cambridge University Press.
    What is the importance of the notion 'human being'? The contributors to this collection have radically different approaches, some accepting and others denying its validity for a proper understanding of what a person is and for our ethical thought about each other. Contributors on both sides of the divide eloquently defend their views in ways that stand in sharp contrast to some current work in moral philosophy and philosophy of mind. Epistemological and theological issues are also raised in the provocative (...)
  • People and their bodies.Judith Jarvis Thomson - 1997 - In Theodore Sider, John Hawthorne & Dean W. Zimmerman (eds.), Contemporary Debates in Metaphysics. Blackwell.
     
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  • Human Beings.Mark Johnston - 1987 - Journal of Philosophy 84 (2):59-83.
  • Reductionism and the first person.John McDowell - 1997 - In J. Dancy (ed.), Reading Parfit. Blackwell. pp. 230--50.