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Nathan Brett Substance and mental identity in Hume's 'Treatise' article This essay is an attempt to restore Hume’s account of personal identity to its place in the treatise and to show that it becomes far more plausible in that setting. In this chapter Hume undertakes the tasks of showing how the mistaken idea of a substantial self arises and providing a model for re-thinking the question and eliminating the mistake. It is argued that Hume does not end up dealing with a false question (as some have claimed), and that this theory of mental identity survives the criticisms of its author.

Substance and mental identity in Hume's 'Treatise'

Nathan Brett

Philosophical quarterly, vol. 22, no. 87, 1972, pp. 110–125

Abstract

This essay is an attempt to restore Hume’s account of personal identity to its place in the treatise and to show that it becomes far more plausible in that setting. In this chapter Hume undertakes the tasks of showing how the mistaken idea of a substantial self arises and providing a model for re-thinking the question and eliminating the mistake. It is argued that Hume does not end up dealing with a false question (as some have claimed), and that this theory of mental identity survives the criticisms of its author.

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