What constitutes identity? The traditional answers have oscillated between two extremes. Materialist theories locate identity in matter itself: we are the atoms, molecules, and physical components that compose us. Dualist theories locate identity in a separate immaterial substance: soul, mind, or spirit. Both approaches encounter serious difficulties. The materialist view struggles to explain persistence through continuous material replacement. The dualist view introduces entities that remain difficult to formalize within the natural sciences. This paper proposes a third alternative. Identity is neither the matter itself nor a separate substance. Identity is the persistence of a structural pattern maintained by boundary conditions and constraints that organize continuously renewed material flows. The wave, the river, and the living organism all reveal the same principle: persistence does not require material permanence. It requires structural continuity.
Claudio Bresciano (Sun,) studied this question.