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Abstract
I show why all current theories of personal identity, including the relativist/dissolutionist alternatives proposed recently by Robert Nozick and Derek Parfit, are subject to criticisms that collectively point in the direction of the thesis that there exists only one person in the universe. By my analysis, we are each a different human being. But the barriers between human beings--such as our each having a different physical body, different memories, a different stream of consciousness, different spatiotemporal positions, and so on--are not necessarily borders between persons. Personhood, I claim, is not reducible to anything but the I: the pure ego or pure consciousness, similar to what Zeno Vendler and J. L. Mackie have recently, folllowing Kant, called the "Transcendental I." It is by avoiding a "transcendental" analysis, however, that leads to the possibility that we are each, personally, the subject of the universe.