Personal Identity In Gideon Yaffe's Liberty Worth The Name

119 Words1 Pages
This, along with his agnosticism about whether the soul was material or immaterial were debated hotly through much of the eighteenth century and at least the debates about personal identity were largely recapitulated in the twentieth century. Much of this begins with the Clarke/Collins controversy of 1707–08. Locke 's account of free agency is just as interesting and important as his account of personal identity with which it is connected. Yet it seems not to have been as controversial as Locke 's account of personal identity. Gideon Yaffe 's recent book Liberty Worth the Name may well revive interest in Locke 's views on this subject as Yaffe argues that they are still of relevance to contemporary debates about free will and