Paul C. Anagnostopoulos
Nap, interrupted.
- Joined
- Aug 3, 2001
- Messages
- 19,141
But, in principle, she can be operated upon and then know what blueness is like. Her lack of knowing blueness is nothing more than a lack of certain physical memories in her brain.David said:
None of those are descriptions of blueness. Mary in the black and white room cannot be given any of your descriptions and know what blueness is like.
But she still won't have experienced the physical process. So if the process is, say, jumping over a stool, and she has never jumped over a stool, she won't have the entire set of associated memories. If the process is something like making gasoline from crude oil, where there is no psychological aspect to the process, then she cannot know what it is like to be gasoline made from crude oil one way or the other.Conversely, Mary can be given a description of a physical process, and know everything there is to know about that description.
It is different, yes, but only because some experiences involve a psychological aspect and some do not. If you want to think that somehow makes consciousness fundamentally different, be my guest.Even though we use the same word (knowledge) for each scenario, the former scenario is different to the latter for the simple reason that blueness cannot be described to Mary.
Of course it can. The problem is that describing the process of seeing blue is not the same thing as seeing blue. The latter forms some memories in the brain that cannot be formed merely by reading a description.If we cannot describe to Mary what blueness is in the same way that we can describe every conceivable physical process, then blueness cannot be physical.
Blueness can be described in terms of physical relationships, but reading that description does not form all of the relationships so described.If blueness cannot be described to Mary in terms of physical relationships then how can you say it affects the brain?
I'm not sure what you mean.In order for something to affect the brain it must be initially defined in a physical way.
The problem with the Mary thought experiment is that it ignores the fact that not all memories are formed by intellectualizing descriptions of processes.
~~ Paul