25. Consciousness unites substances, material or spiritual, with the same personality.
I agree, the more probable
opinion is, that this consciousness is annexed to, and the affection of, one individual immaterial substance.
But let men, according to their diverse hypotheses, resolve of that as they please. This every intelligent being,
sensible of happiness or misery, must grant--that there is something that is himself, that he is concerned for, and
would have happy; that this self has existed in a continued duration more than one instant, and therefore it is
possible may exist, as it has done, months and years to come, without any certain bounds to be set to its duration;
and may be the same self, by the same consciousness continued on for the future. And thus, by this consciousness
he finds himself to be the same self which did such and such an action some years since, by which he comes to be
happy or miserable now. In all which account of self, the same numerical substance is not considered as making
the same self, but the same continued consciousness, in which several substances may have been united, and again
separated from it, which, whilst they continued in a vital union with that wherein this consciousness then resided,
made a part of that same self. Thus any part of our bodies, vitally united to that which is conscious in us, makes a
part of ourselves: but upon separation from the vital union by which that consciousness is communicated, that
which a moment since was part of ourselves, is now no more so than a part of another man's self is a part of me:
and it is not impossible but in a little time may become a real part of another person. And so we have the same
numerical substance become a part of two different persons; and the same person preserved under the change of
various substances. Could we suppose any spirit wholly stripped of all its memory or consciousness of past
actions, as we find our minds always are of a great part of ours, and sometimes of them all; the union or
separation of such a spiritual substance would make no variation of personal identity, any more than that of any
particle of matter does. Any substance vitally united to the present thinking being is a part of that very same self
which now is; anything united to it by a consciousness of former actions, makes also a part of the same self,
which is the same both then and now.