[2] List also argues that the vertiginous question implies a "quadrilemma" for theories of consciousness.
Vincent Conitzer argues that the vertiginous question is related to A series and B series theories of time, and that arguments in favor of the A-theory of time are more effective as arguments for the combined position of both A-theory being true and the "I" being metaphysically privileged from other perspectives.
[5] Caspar Hare has made similar arguments with the theories of egocentric presentism and perspectival realism, of which several other philosophers have written reviews.
Thomas Nagel has extensively discussed the question of personal identity in The View from Nowhere.
[10] Nagel describes the objective perspective as the "view from nowhere", one where the only valuable ideas are ones derived independently.