Stimpson J. Cat
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Sep 20, 2001
- Messages
- 1,949
Paul,
I would say that the specific neural connections you are talking about is a part of the memory of seeing red. The memory is more than just the abstract information that we can cognitively retrieve from it at will.
On the contrary, I would say that calling them physical facts confuses the issue, since these "facts" are not abstract information. Clearly all that Mary can be expected to learn from reading a book is abstract information.
I think what we are dealing with here is primarily a semantic issue. We can call them facts, or not call them facts. This only determines which of the statements in the original though experiment is false. If we call them facts, then the claim that after reading a complete description of red, Mary will have all the facts about red, is false. If we don't call them facts, then the claim that when she sees red, she will learn new facts about red, is false.
Either way, the problem is that two statements in the thought experiment use the word "fact" in ways that must mean different things, in order for those statements to both be true under physicalism.
One approach would be to say that there is no contradiction, because the word "fact" means something different in the two statements. Another approach would be to say that she doesn't learn all the facts from reading the book. And a third approach would be to say that she does not learn any new facts when she sees red. It all depends on what you mean by "facts".
Dr. Stupid
I'm still not catching on. Let me pick a specific set of neural connections that Mary might hypothetically obtain from seeing color: the weights in the visual cortex that specify the relative amount of each color in typical objects. There might not be such a thing, but I think we can agree that there are neural connections like this. Pick one of them.
First of all, referring to this as "memory" seems misleading. It is memory in that all neural encoding is memory, but it is not memory in the common sense of memory of events that can be retreived more or less at will.
I would say that the specific neural connections you are talking about is a part of the memory of seeing red. The memory is more than just the abstract information that we can cognitively retrieve from it at will.
That said, I don't understand why we wouldn't call this neural encoding a fact, in particular, a physical fact. Calling it something else confuses the issue when we say "Mary has learned all the physical facts about color." She cannot learn these sorts of facts by reading books (I'm assuming no robot operation here). She can gain the knowledge of how the visual cortex works, but not the personal neural connections.
On the contrary, I would say that calling them physical facts confuses the issue, since these "facts" are not abstract information. Clearly all that Mary can be expected to learn from reading a book is abstract information.
These kinds of facts are referred to as subjective physical facts by at least one writer (http://neologic.net/rd/chalmers/mdeutsch.html).
I think what we are dealing with here is primarily a semantic issue. We can call them facts, or not call them facts. This only determines which of the statements in the original though experiment is false. If we call them facts, then the claim that after reading a complete description of red, Mary will have all the facts about red, is false. If we don't call them facts, then the claim that when she sees red, she will learn new facts about red, is false.
Either way, the problem is that two statements in the thought experiment use the word "fact" in ways that must mean different things, in order for those statements to both be true under physicalism.
One approach would be to say that there is no contradiction, because the word "fact" means something different in the two statements. Another approach would be to say that she doesn't learn all the facts from reading the book. And a third approach would be to say that she does not learn any new facts when she sees red. It all depends on what you mean by "facts".
Dr. Stupid