
doi: 10.15443/rl2919
Bodily and mental self-ascriptions are forms of first-person thought where a subject attributes physical properties and psychological states to herself. The body-ownership view argues that a necessary and sufficient condition on such self-ascriptions is the existence of causal links between a spatio-temporal body and the self-ascribed properties or states. However, since P.F. Strawson’s influential attack, this view has been dismissed as a bad philosophical idea. The goal of this brief piece is to outline the body-ownership view and neutralise two classic lines of objection against it: on the one hand, that the stance is incoherent; and, on the other, that it has counterintuitive implications.
causal links, Animalismo, body-ownership, posesión corporal, B1-5802, first-person thought, -, P.F. Strawson, Animalism, causales, nexos, pensamientos de primera persona, Philosophy (General)
causal links, Animalismo, body-ownership, posesión corporal, B1-5802, first-person thought, -, P.F. Strawson, Animalism, causales, nexos, pensamientos de primera persona, Philosophy (General)
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