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Introduction to Philosophy Lecture 14 Minds and Bodies #3 (Jackson)

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1 Introduction to Philosophy Lecture 14 Minds and Bodies #3 (Jackson)
By David Kelsey

2 Contemporary dualism Dualism revisited:
Contemporary philosophical defenders of dualism have rather different views from those Descartes had. They are more interested in consciousness. Even if Physicalism can explain a lot of things, it can’t explain conscious experience.

3 Qualia Conscious Experience:
When philosophers talk about consciousness, we have a very precise type of issue in mind. By Conscious experience, philosophers mean issues about what it’s like to have certain experiences: What it’s like to see red. These mental states are called qualia. Also called raw feels or sense data.

4 More on Qualia Qualia: The easiest way to get the idea of qualia is to think about people who are experiencing the same things you are, but have different qualia. The colorblind person… The Qualia of Driving: Have you ever had the experience of a long drive? Zoning out and the missing Qualia…

5 Inverted Qualia Inverted Qualia:
Suppose that there’s someone who, from birth, when they see red, has just the experience you have when you see blue and vice versa. Their red and blue qualia are reversed, or inverted. They call the color of a ripe tomato ‘red’ even though their qualia is like your blue qualia… Can you tell from someone’s behavior that they’re suffering from inverted qualia?

6 Physicalism and Qualia
Qualia: trouble for Physicalism: What we’ve said about qualia so far is already trouble for some kinds of physicalism. The Behaviorist can’t allow for the possibility of inverted qualia, since people with inverted qualia would behave just like the rest of us. What about the identity theorist?

7 Jackson Frank Jackson (1943-present) An Australian philosopher.
Most famous for his knowledge argument for dualism. He has actually given up dualism now, but he still thinks the argument is valid. He is known for giving very convincing, commonsensical arguments

8 Jackson & What Mary didn’t know
The Mary Thought Experiment: Imagine a woman Mary Mary is a brilliant scientist who’s been imprisoned for life in a room painted entirely black and white. Even Mary herself is painted. She conducts experiments (viewing the results through black and white TV) and learns every physical fact about the mind. The physical properties of color and the eye’s response to light… What Mary doesn’t know: Even after Mary has learned every physical fact, she still doesn’t know what it’s like to see the color red. Imagine what happens when she steps outside of the room for the first time and sees a ripe tomato.

9 Thought Experiments Thought experiments:
Jackson’s example of Mary is a thought experiment. A thought experiment is a constructed case which is used to test our intuitions about some philosophical puzzle... So Jackson constructs the Mary thought experiment to test our intuitions about Dualism. In particular, the Mary experiment is supposed to lead us to the intuition that Mary learns a non-physical fact…

10 The Knowledge Argument
Jackson takes the Mary thought experiment as evidence against Physicalism His argument is known as the Knowledge argument: 1. Mary knows every fact about the physical world. 2. Mary learns a fact about qualia, which she didn’t previously know, when she steps out of the black and white room. 3. Thus, facts about qualia are facts about the nonphysical. 4. Thus, Physicalism is false. 5. Thus, Dualism is true.

11 Epiphenomenalism Epiphenomenalism:
A thing is epiphenomenal if and only if it can be caused by other things, but never causes anything itself. According to Jackson, Qualia are epiphenomenal. Qualia are caused by physical states, such as brain states, but they do not have any physical effects. So there are two types of Dualists: Interactionists like Descartes: the non-physical aspects of the mind have physical causes and physical effects. Epiphenomenalists like Jackson: the non-physical aspects of the mind have physical causes but no physical effects.

12 Epiphenomenalism and beliefs
Although the Epiphenomalist thinks Qualia are non-physical states, he does allow that some mental states are physical states. Belief states and desire states are physical states: According to the Epiphenomenalist, only physical states can cause other physical states. Belief states and Desire states cause you to act. Beer in the fridge example…

13 Objection #1: Zombies The Problem of other minds:
Epiphenomenalism suffers from the problem of other minds… Someone who lacks all Qualia is called a zombie. According to epiphenomenalism, zombies would be physically just like us… So how could I tell that you’re not a zombie?

14 Objection #2: Could we know that epiphenomenalism is true?
Could we even know Epiphenomenalism was true: Suppose epiphenomenalism was true. Suppose I’ve convinced you all with Jackson’s argument. At no point did qualia play any causal role in the argument that convinced you. How then can the Knowledge argument be a good reason to believe its conclusion?

15 Physicalism and Qualia
Qualia are a problem for Physicalism: How should the Physicalist think about qualia? What should the Physicalist say about inverted qualia? How should the Physicalist reply to the knowledge argument? Two options: Mary wouldn’t learn anything new when she leaves the black and white room. Mary would learn something, but not a new fact.

16 Denying the Intuition The first Physicalist response is to Deny the intuition: Some physicalists deny that Mary would learn anything new when she leaves the black and white room. We can only have the intuition that she learns if we are genuinely able to imagine the case as described. Maybe we can’t imagine Jackson’s Mary experiment: …because we can’t imagine what someone would do who knew every physical fact. Jackson’s reply: but you only have to imagine Mary knows every relevant fact.

17 The Ability hypothesis
The Second Physicalist response: Mary doesn’t learn a new fact: Mary doesn’t learn a new fact, she acquires the ability to distinguish red things from dark grey things… Riding a bike: Learning to see red is like learning to ride a bike: they can’t be learned in a book… So Knowing how to do something is not the same as knowing that something is true. Jackson’s reply: But Mary always had the ability to distinguish red things from dark grey things. Is this response adequate? Question: is what Mary learns like an ability or is it like a fact?


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