The fact that these physicalists feel it would be in some way necessary to instantiate colour, but not other things, like photosynthesis or fusion, means they subscribe to the idea that there is something epistemically unique about qualia/experience, even if they resist the idea that qualia are metaphysically unique.
No, it means they subscribe to the idea that there is something ethically different about qualia/experience. It’s not unique, it’s like riding a bike. Human sometimes call physical interactions, utility of which is not obtainable by just thinking, “knowledge”, when these interactions are with human body. And “they feel” is not an argument about knowledge, it’s an argument about feelings. The difference between instantiating fusion in brain or red is not epistemical, it’s ethical—qualia are useful for humans, so they don’t properly transfer intuitions into Mary’s case, and even if they do, humans care more about their brain instantiating red, than their brain fusing. Fundamentally, they all can be viewed as different representations of knowledge. It’s just some representations are valuable by themselves.
What? Are you saying that if it is necessary for something for her than completer knowledge, it isn’t necessary for complete knowledge?
I’m saying that if differences in feelings of necessity are explainable by preferences, then what need there is to introduce problematic definitions of knowledge?
The intended point is that she gains knowledge from personal experience that isn’t predictable from a perfect understanding of physics. I don’t know what you mean by “physicalism predicts gaining knowledge”. Physicalism doesn’t predict that you should gain additional knowledge by instantiating a state yourself , because physicalism is the idea that all facts are physical facts, which implies all facts are objective facts, which implies personal instantiation can’t add anything (so king sc you, like Mary, dint have any resource limitationd)
Yes, and the consequence of this point is that you shouldn’t use such definition of knowledge, because it implies that knowing how to ride a bike is unphysical.
Physicalism in a strict sense means that objective knowledge is the only knowledge.
I don’t see how there can be any objective knowledge—encodings are subjective. By the way, why is ok for Physicalism to mean different things in context of different arguments? Physicalism in the Hard Problem doesn’t mean that knowing how to ride a bike is unphysical.
But if you insist on defining Physicalism in such a way, then yes, Mary doesn’t gain additional knowledge. Which proves that such definition contradicts some people’s intuition about experience and bikes. It doesn’t prove anything about real epistemology without additional assumptions.
Mary’s Room, AKA the Knowledge Argument is about knowledge. It’s epistemological. No explicit claims about ontology are made. No nonphysical ontology is implied by talking about qualia, either, for the usual reason that qualia aren’t defined as nonphysical.
I’m saying it doesn’t work as argument without ontological assumptions.
Without predicting what they are.
No qualia are predicted by phytsicalism.
That’s not a fact. Physicalism doesn’t predict that anything feels like anything.
You can’t conclude this without additional assumptions from Mary alone! I’m not arguing “physicalism is true” here, only that Mary is useless in disproving it. The only thing you can get from Mary, is that there is prediction-instantiation gap with experiences. But it’s the same gap as between knowing about a state and being in a state, like with knowing how to ride a bike.
One of such possible assumptions is that there is some difference between relations of knowledge and state in cases of experience and bikes. That in some sense knowledge without acquaintance about bikes is still about bikes, but knowledge about experience is not actually about experience. That knowledge without acquaintance about experience is incomplete in some additional way, not related to the ordinary difference between knowing and being. But it is an additional assumption, not something you can derive from Mary’s Room, because, again, Mary gaining something after leaving the room is predicted both in case of experience and in case of bikes.
Atoms undergoing exothermic reactions involving oxygen is exactly what is fire. If you use a sufficiently detailed reductive explanation,nl it does lead to identity. Heat is disorganised molecular activity.
I don’t see how you can get identity if you can just can have an ontology that doesn’t contain fire, only atoms. You can get some atoms to be numerically close to a reencoding of atoms of your brain that perceives fire. Or numerically close to some other previous model of fire. You can then check some limits for divergence and declare that atomic model matches empirical results precise-enough. But no one expects previous model to be precisely equivalent to new one? And reasoning about different specific fires definitely involves probabilistic induction.
Conversely, if by “necessary” you just mean ordinary way science does reductions, then Mary’s situation with experience fully qualifies: she correctly concludes that red qualia are activity of neurons, have as complete knowledge about bats on LSD as of bikes and fires, can say that the red of roses will feel similar to the red of blood, can predict her entire field of view with pixels marked “red” with more precision, than she will be able to track in the moment, and will get new experience after leaving the room as predicted. No part of it contradicts qualia being reducible to physics. You can only argue it by bringing zombies. Or show on which step Mary fails to reduce red qualia, that doesn’t work the same way with bikes or fires.
I guess the more substantial disagreement may be in the part, where a description of a bat-on-LSD experience in the language of physics or neural activity is somehow doesn’t count, as opposed to… I’m not sure what people expect, a description in the terms usually used to describe human experience starting with “it feels like...”? But that’s just the question of precision—why should describing nuclear reactor in terms of fire would be required to claim success in reduction? There is of course the difference between you knowing about bats-on-LSD and you having such experience—but that is also true about riding a bike or any other physical state.
It all looks to me like people are confusing knowing about qualia and being in a state of having qualia—that’s why they assume perfect certain knowledge of qualia they have, talk about qualia being impossible to communicate and so on.
?? She isn’t defined as knowing everything plausible, she is defined as knowing everything physical/objective.
No, it means they subscribe to the idea that there is something ethically different about qualia/experience. It’s not unique, it’s like riding a bike. Human sometimes call physical interactions, utility of which is not obtainable by just thinking, “knowledge”, when these interactions are with human body. And “they feel” is not an argument about knowledge, it’s an argument about feelings. The difference between instantiating fusion in brain or red is not epistemical, it’s ethical—qualia are useful for humans, so they don’t properly transfer intuitions into Mary’s case, and even if they do, humans care more about their brain instantiating red, than their brain fusing. Fundamentally, they all can be viewed as different representations of knowledge. It’s just some representations are valuable by themselves.
I’m saying that if differences in feelings of necessity are explainable by preferences, then what need there is to introduce problematic definitions of knowledge?
Yes, and the consequence of this point is that you shouldn’t use such definition of knowledge, because it implies that knowing how to ride a bike is unphysical.
I don’t see how there can be any objective knowledge—encodings are subjective. By the way, why is ok for Physicalism to mean different things in context of different arguments? Physicalism in the Hard Problem doesn’t mean that knowing how to ride a bike is unphysical.
But if you insist on defining Physicalism in such a way, then yes, Mary doesn’t gain additional knowledge. Which proves that such definition contradicts some people’s intuition about experience and bikes. It doesn’t prove anything about real epistemology without additional assumptions.
I’m saying it doesn’t work as argument without ontological assumptions.
You can’t conclude this without additional assumptions from Mary alone! I’m not arguing “physicalism is true” here, only that Mary is useless in disproving it. The only thing you can get from Mary, is that there is prediction-instantiation gap with experiences. But it’s the same gap as between knowing about a state and being in a state, like with knowing how to ride a bike.
One of such possible assumptions is that there is some difference between relations of knowledge and state in cases of experience and bikes. That in some sense knowledge without acquaintance about bikes is still about bikes, but knowledge about experience is not actually about experience. That knowledge without acquaintance about experience is incomplete in some additional way, not related to the ordinary difference between knowing and being. But it is an additional assumption, not something you can derive from Mary’s Room, because, again, Mary gaining something after leaving the room is predicted both in case of experience and in case of bikes.
I don’t see how you can get identity if you can just can have an ontology that doesn’t contain fire, only atoms. You can get some atoms to be numerically close to a reencoding of atoms of your brain that perceives fire. Or numerically close to some other previous model of fire. You can then check some limits for divergence and declare that atomic model matches empirical results precise-enough. But no one expects previous model to be precisely equivalent to new one? And reasoning about different specific fires definitely involves probabilistic induction.
Conversely, if by “necessary” you just mean ordinary way science does reductions, then Mary’s situation with experience fully qualifies: she correctly concludes that red qualia are activity of neurons, have as complete knowledge about bats on LSD as of bikes and fires, can say that the red of roses will feel similar to the red of blood, can predict her entire field of view with pixels marked “red” with more precision, than she will be able to track in the moment, and will get new experience after leaving the room as predicted. No part of it contradicts qualia being reducible to physics. You can only argue it by bringing zombies. Or show on which step Mary fails to reduce red qualia, that doesn’t work the same way with bikes or fires.
I guess the more substantial disagreement may be in the part, where a description of a bat-on-LSD experience in the language of physics or neural activity is somehow doesn’t count, as opposed to… I’m not sure what people expect, a description in the terms usually used to describe human experience starting with “it feels like...”? But that’s just the question of precision—why should describing nuclear reactor in terms of fire would be required to claim success in reduction? There is of course the difference between you knowing about bats-on-LSD and you having such experience—but that is also true about riding a bike or any other physical state.
It all looks to me like people are confusing knowing about qualia and being in a state of having qualia—that’s why they assume perfect certain knowledge of qualia they have, talk about qualia being impossible to communicate and so on.
Sorry, typo—“plausibly includes”.