
People Who Read People: A Behavior and Psychology Podcast Is your existence improbable? Or inevitable? Exploring universalism with Arnold Zuboff
Feb 21, 2026
Arnold Zuboff, philosopher and author of Finding Myself, argues for universalism (open individualism) where the same 'I' underlies all first‑person experience. He explains why immediacy, not bodily facts, grounds identity. Discussions cover split‑brain cases, probability arguments about existence, links to multiverse and anthropic ideas, and moral implications for empathy, punishment, and death.
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Immediacy Is What Makes Experience 'Mine'
- Arnold Zuboff argues that the first-person character of experience (immediacy) is what makes an experience "mine."
- Sliding the identity criterion to immediacy dissolves conventional boundaries between distinct selves.
Reverse The Identity Assumption
- Zuboff flips the usual view: experiences are first-person and make the bearer "me," not the other way round.
- Therefore whatever has that immediate character must count as me regardless of body or history.
Split-Brain Evening Thought Experiment
- Zuboff recounts split-brain research showing non-integrated conscious contents in each hemisphere.
- He uses a thought experiment where both hemispheres experience different streams yet both remain "mine."




