Eric Schliesser Philosophy and Moral Sciences, Ghent University ª 2011, Eric Schliesser

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826 BOOK REVIEWS proofs in the TTP that they are false. Consequently, Garber is mistaken that the TTP is suitable only for an ideal private audience... [that] should be whispered into the ear of the Philosopher King (187). Garber s argument does apply, however, to Spinoza s Ethics. Charlie Huenemann is to be congratulated for assembling a superb cast of contributors whose nine chapters focus on interconnected themes in the study of Spinoza s metaphysics, psychology, and politics (1). These give an excellent snapshot of how some of the most prominent historians of philosophy are approaching Spinoza; many have added generous footnotes acknowledging their personal and scholarly debts to Curley. However, I do have one final overall reservation: Curley s scholarship draws on and is in permanent dialogue with European and, especially, French interpretations of Spinoza. Yet, in this volume, these barely register as more than a few footnotes (and then only in a few chapters). Despite Curley s best efforts, we are still a long way from a cosmopolitan discussion of Spinoza. Eric Schliesser Philosophy and Moral Sciences, Ghent University ª 2011, Eric Schliesser K. Joanna S. Forstrom: John Locke and Personal Identity: Immortality and Bodily Resurrection in 17th-Century Philosophy. London: Continuum International Publishing Group, 2010, pp. 154. 65.00, $120.00 (hb.). ISBN 978-1-8470-6145-4 A quick perusal of the contents of this book reveals that the title John Locke and Personal Identity is slightly misleading. There are six chapters in total, and Locke s theory of personal identity is the subject of only two of them: Chapters 1 and 6. Each of the four chapters in between is devoted to one of Locke s contemporaries Descartes, Hobbes, More and Boyle or, more particularly, to their views on the immortality of the soul and/or bodily resurrection. Forstrom argues that not only do these views form the context for Locke s development of his theory of personal identity, but also (and more importantly) that when this theory is appropriately contextualized it is revealed to have resources sufficient to overcome a number of long-established objections raised against it, specifically those by Thomas Reid and Joseph Butler. This latter claim is intended to be the book s central thesis. The first chapter details some of the background to Locke s decision to include a chapter on personal identity in the second edition of his Essay concerning Human Understanding (1694). The key trigger, according to Forstrom, was Molyneux s suggestion to Locke that he expand his Essay by treating the traditional metaphysical problem of the principle of individuation, namely the problem of what individuates, or makes distinct, an individual from others of the same kind (7). Forstrom suggests that interest

BOOK REVIEWS 827 in this problem was fuelled by what she sees as tension between two traditional theological commitments, the first to personal immortality, the second to a future bodily resurrection. Both commitments are tied to the Christian belief that on the Day of Judgment we shall be judged by God for our deeds, and then subjected to either punishment or reward in the afterlife. The Christian eschatological vision was widely considered to form the cornerstone of public morality (for as one s future fate was held to be determined by how one acted in this life individuals had a clear incentive to act morally in it), but it was also widely recognized that it could only do so if there were grounds to suppose that the person judged on the Last Day, and then subjected to reward or punishment, will be the same person as the one whose earthly actions she is being judged for. After all, the afterlife can only be of concern to a person if she is confident that it will be the same person, i.e. her, that gets to experience it. Also at stake is God s justice, since God can only be just if he holds to account the very same person who committed a particular praiseworthy or blameworthy action. The theological need to identify criteria for the diachronic identity of persons is thus clear. According to Forstrom, this was Locke s chief motivation in developing his theory of personal identity. Having sketched the background, Forstrom proceeds to offer a brief overview of Locke s theory (22). She summarizes Locke as claiming that the existence of a person is the existence of a consciousness, and the continued existence of that person is the continued existence of that consciousness (24) and that individuals are morally accountable for those actions that can be appropriated by the extension of consciousness back to past actions (25). In the process of her brief exposition Forstrom cites various passages (such as Essay II.27.22 and II.27.26) to show Locke s concern with explaining how an individual will be responsible for his or her actions here on earth after death (28). This seems, to my mind, a perfectly defensible suggestion, and Forstrom seems on solid ground when she makes it. However, while this aspect of Forstrom s overview is instructive, in general the presentation of Locke s theory that she offers in Chapter 1 is basic and somewhat un-nuanced. For example, nothing is said about whether Locke offers a straightforward memory criterion of personal identity, as has traditionally been believed, or a memory continuity criterion, as some scholars have argued. In fact there is no mention at all here of the scholarly debates about the details of Locke s theory, and a reader unfamiliar with the literature is liable to come away from this book with the impression that the account sketched by Forstrom is straightforward and uncontentious. Anyone seeking a detailed philosophical analysis of Lockean personal identity will therefore need to look elsewhere. Forstrom then moves to consider Locke s theory of personal identity in relation to the accounts of personal immortality and/or bodily resurrection defended by four of his contemporaries, namely Descartes (Chapter 2), Hobbes (Chapter 3), More (Chapter 4) and Boyle (Chapter 5). As is noted

828 BOOK REVIEWS early in the book, a number of historians of philosophy have already sought to contextualize both Locke and his theory of personal identity, but Forstrom claims to offer an extension and deepening of the trend to contextualize historical thinkers, since in her book the context not only of Locke is discussed, but also that of those to whom he is responding (2). In other words, Forstrom seeks not just to contextualize Locke, but to contextualize his context, so to speak. A good example of what this involves can be found in Chapter 2, which focuses primarily on expounding Descartes s arguments for the real distinction between soul and body, and for the immortality of the soul. Forstrom explains not only how Descartes s work forms a major part of the intellectual background leading up to Locke s development of his theory of personal identity, but also how Descartes s own efforts were driven by his desire to satisfy the demand that was made of Christian philosophers by the fifth Lateran Council to develop arguments for the immortality of the soul (33 8). In subsequent chapters, Forstrom intimates that the main context for Hobbes is Descartes s work; for More, that of Descartes and Hobbes; and for Boyle, the work of Hobbes and More. Forstrum s discussion of the various thinkers interweaves and overlaps accordingly. Thus, through Chapters 2 to 5, Forstrom presents an account of some key seventeenth-century philosophical debates on immortality and resurrection, and traces some of the ways the protagonists engaged with and responded to each other. It is in its capturing some of the richness of these debates that this book derives the bulk of its value. Nevertheless, Forstrom s treatment of these debates suffers from a number of serious weaknesses, of which I shall mention two. First, the attempt to contextualize Locke s theory is marred by a puzzling omission, namely an extended treatment of the traditional Scholastic account of individuation and personal identity, as found defended, for example, in the work of Kenelm Digby. Forstrom notes time and again that Locke, Descartes, Hobbes, More, and Boyle were reacting to the Scholasticism that was entrenched in the universities for much of the seventeenth century, and given her stated aim to contextualize both Locke and his context, it is surprising that she provides little detail about the Scholastic theories to which all of these thinkers were reacting. The second weakness relates to Forstrom s argument that Locke s theory of personal identity was directly influenced by the work of Hobbes, More, and Boyle. In each case the claim of influence is highly problematic. To give just one example, in Chapter 4 Forstrom bases her view that Locke was influenced by Henry More on the fact that he seems to accept one move of More s... [namely] that of allowing conscience to play a significant role in the afterlife (100). Forstrom identifies a passage from II.27.22 of Locke s Essay as evidence of this: but in the great day, wherein the secrets of all hearts shall be laid open, it may be reasonable to think, no one shall be made to answer for what he knows nothing of; but shall receive his doom, his conscience accusing or excusing him. Yet this passage is clearly

BOOK REVIEWS 829 informed not by More s philosophy but by scripture, specifically I Corinthians 14.25 and Romans 2.15. As already noted, this historical survey is intended to support Forstrom s contention that Locke s theory of personal identity was developed in response to certain theological concerns about personal immortality and God s justice, and that when viewed this way it can be seen to have the resources to withstand three longstanding objections to it, one by Thomas Reid, the other two by Joseph Butler. Forstrom seeks to make good this claim in Chapter 6 by reconsidering the three objections in light of her reappraisal of Locke s motives for developing his theory in the first place. In what follows I shall consider Forstrom s discussion of just one of these objections, Reid s so-called brave officer objection. Reid s objection is well known, but it is worth briefly stating Forstrom s slightly modified version here: a brave officer steals an apple when still a boy at school; he is conscious of the theft some years later, when he is an officer, but has lost consciousness of it later in life, when he is a general, though at this point he is conscious of actions he committed as an officer. According to Reid, Locke s theory of personal identity is committed to holding that the officer is the same person as the boy (on account of the former being conscious of the theft committed by the latter), that the general is the same person as the officer (on account of the former being conscious of actions committed by the latter), and yet also committed to holding that the general is not the same person as the boy (the failure in transitivity arising from the fact that the general is not conscious of the boyhood theft). Forstrom notes, quite rightly, that Reid s objection is generally taken to expose a serious problem with Locke s theory of personal identity. According to Forstrom, however, this is a mistake. She accepts that Locke is committed to saying that the general is not the same person as the boy, and so should not be held accountable for the boy s theft, but claims that this does not undermine Locke s theory because The question Locke is concerned with is: Will the general be held responsible for stealing the apple when he is resurrected and judged by his conscience on the Day of Judgment? (123). The answer, according to Forstrom, is Yes, because on the Day of Judgment the secrets of the heart will be restored to him, and he will thus regain the consciousness of the boyhood theft that he had previously lost, and so will be morally accountable for it once again. Forstrom s suggestion is intriguing and deserves more attention than I can give it here. It is worth noting, however, that it has all the hallmarks of a Deus ex machina, not to mention all the problems associated with that. For example, Forstrom thinks that Locke will look to God to restore lost memories at the time of the Last Judgment, but she is silent about the criteria that God will use to do this. This is no small matter. Lockean personal identity is determined entirely by consciousness. However, in Reid s example, the general has no consciousness of the boyhood theft. So if God restores consciousness of that event to the general at the Last Judgment, and is correct in doing so, as

830 BOOK REVIEWS Forstrom assumes He is, He must be utilizing in the general s case some criterion of personal identity other than the general s own consciousness of actions he has performed (which of course is precisely what the general lacks in the case of the boyhood theft). However, if there is some criterion by which lost memories can be correctly restored to individuals like the general, and which does not involve consciousness, then personal identity cannot be determined entirely by consciousness after all! It is thus doubtful that Forstrom s recontextualizing of Locke s theory of personal identity is sufficient to bolster it against Reid s objection. Nevertheless, in spite of the aforementioned faults, both students and scholars can draw profit from Forstrom s historical survey of various seventeenth-century views on immortality and resurrection, which is often well-crafted and insightful. Lloyd Strickland University of Wales, Trinity Saint David ª 2011, Lloyd Strickland