Stimpson J. Cat
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Sep 20, 2001
- Messages
- 1,949
Rusty,
This apparent contradiction is due to an impreciseness of the way it is stated, and nothing more.
Remember that knowledge is not information. It is the physical representation of information in the brain.
Mary knows everything about red:
This means that all of the facts about red are represented in Mary's brain.
Mary knows everything about the experience of seeing red:
It could mean that all of the facts about the experience of seeing red are represented in Mary's brain, including the facts about what the physical state of her brain would be if she had the memory of having seen red.
The question is whether this statement also means that she literally has the memory of seeing red. If it does, then I assert that physicalism does not imply that she should be able to get this memory by reading a book. All the book can give her is a description of what her brain would be like if she did have that memory. It cannot alter her brain to be that way.
Sure, but all the book contains is a description of the physical state her brain would have if she possessed that knowledge. Reading that description is not going to alter her brain in such a way for her to have that knowledge.
You can take it to as many levels of abstraction as you want. This does not change the fundamental issue, which is that knowledge is a physical state of the brain, and all that can be written in the book is a description of that physical state. Physicalism only requires that it should be possible to construct a description of the physical state. It in no way requires that knowing that description will cause your brain to change to match that description.
Saying that it can be reduced to the physical facts does not mean that the physical facts are all there is. Reducing something to physical facts just means you have a physical description of it. It does not mean that it is the description. Expecting a description of knowledge to transform into actual knowledge is no different than expecting a description of a toaster to transform into a real toaster.
The problem is that you are thinking of reducing knowledge to information, and then converting that information back to knowledge. Nothing physical can be reduced to information. When we say that something is reducible to the physical facts, we just mean that it can be described in terms of physical facts. Those facts are information. The physical thing being described is not information. knowledge is not just information. Reading information describing knowledge is not going to give somebody that knowledge. A physical process is necessary to alter to brain so that it has the knowledge.
For abstract knowledge (the memory of information), a mechanism is already in place to turn the information into knowledge. For empirical knowledge (the memory of an experience), no such mechanism is in place. This has nothing to do with philosophy. It is simply a statement about how the brain works.
This is not a problem. A subjective experience is a physical process in somebody's brain. Saying that the subjective experience is reducible to a state where any human can perceive it, just means that a description of that process can be constructed, which another person could see. It does not mean that it must be possible to execute that process in anybody else's brain. That is exactly what it would take for another person to experience your subjective experiences for themselves. Physicalism in no way says that this should be possible.
This illustrates the source of our disagreement. A book cannot contain knowledge. It only contains information. The knowledge of what it is like to see read cannot be written down in a book, nor acquired by reading it, any more than a cat could be stored in a book, and then produced by reading it. Only a description of the knowledge can be stored in the book. And this is all that Physicalism requires.
Those facts are not all there is. The facts are not the neural connections. They are a description of the neural connections. The neural connections are not in the book, only a description of them is. Reading the book will not give Mary those neural connections. It will only give her a description of them.
Where on Earth did you get the idea that Physicalism claims that physical reality is made of facts? This is absurd!
I can't put a dog into a book, why should I be able to put a brain state in a book?
UCE,
I am not going to respond to you line by line anymore, since I have already responded to all the points you are making before. I will just say once again, that I do not accept your assertion that my mind exists only for me. That is the premise upon which your entire "mind is different from brain" argument depends, and it is completely unjustified.
Dr. Stupid
Let me see if I can put this into these terms:
Mary knows everything about red.
Mary knows everything about the experience of seeing red.
Mary still gains something.
What Mary is gaining is the knowledge that she has gained the experience personally.
This apparent contradiction is due to an impreciseness of the way it is stated, and nothing more.
Remember that knowledge is not information. It is the physical representation of information in the brain.
Mary knows everything about red:
This means that all of the facts about red are represented in Mary's brain.
Mary knows everything about the experience of seeing red:
It could mean that all of the facts about the experience of seeing red are represented in Mary's brain, including the facts about what the physical state of her brain would be if she had the memory of having seen red.
The question is whether this statement also means that she literally has the memory of seeing red. If it does, then I assert that physicalism does not imply that she should be able to get this memory by reading a book. All the book can give her is a description of what her brain would be like if she did have that memory. It cannot alter her brain to be that way.
This knowledge is present in some physical form in Mary's brain, right?
So what if we add a third book, this book contains all the physical information (which is all the information) about the knowledge that she would gain if she had the experience personally.
Sure, but all the book contains is a description of the physical state her brain would have if she possessed that knowledge. Reading that description is not going to alter her brain in such a way for her to have that knowledge.
Also let us assume that we will add pages to this book to describe the physical information (all the information) about the knowledge of having the knowledge to the Nth power.
I'm assuming we will agree that in the physicalist world there is a logical limit to the levels of knowledge we can posses, right?
So now Mary has all three books, and learns everything she can learn in all three.
This puts us back into the problem.
You can take it to as many levels of abstraction as you want. This does not change the fundamental issue, which is that knowledge is a physical state of the brain, and all that can be written in the book is a description of that physical state. Physicalism only requires that it should be possible to construct a description of the physical state. It in no way requires that knowing that description will cause your brain to change to match that description.
Right. But if Mary can only learn X amount about Red then how could she learn more by seeing red? If everything, including seeing red, is reduced to it's physical fact (and that is all that there is) then how can she learn more?
Saying that it can be reduced to the physical facts does not mean that the physical facts are all there is. Reducing something to physical facts just means you have a physical description of it. It does not mean that it is the description. Expecting a description of knowledge to transform into actual knowledge is no different than expecting a description of a toaster to transform into a real toaster.
Knowledge is a physical state in the brain. Under physicalism everything about knowledge can be reduced to the point where it can be perceived by Mary. So the new third book with this reduction should address this.
If there is some part of the knowledge that cannot be reduced then it's the same problem.
The problem is that you are thinking of reducing knowledge to information, and then converting that information back to knowledge. Nothing physical can be reduced to information. When we say that something is reducible to the physical facts, we just mean that it can be described in terms of physical facts. Those facts are information. The physical thing being described is not information. knowledge is not just information. Reading information describing knowledge is not going to give somebody that knowledge. A physical process is necessary to alter to brain so that it has the knowledge.
For abstract knowledge (the memory of information), a mechanism is already in place to turn the information into knowledge. For empirical knowledge (the memory of an experience), no such mechanism is in place. This has nothing to do with philosophy. It is simply a statement about how the brain works.
Under physicalism all subjective facts must be reducable to a state where any human can perceive them (making them objective).
This is not a problem. A subjective experience is a physical process in somebody's brain. Saying that the subjective experience is reducible to a state where any human can perceive it, just means that a description of that process can be constructed, which another person could see. It does not mean that it must be possible to execute that process in anybody else's brain. That is exactly what it would take for another person to experience your subjective experiences for themselves. Physicalism in no way says that this should be possible.
Yeah, but now there is a third book addressing this.
And this book is stipulated that it will contain all further levels of knowledge about knowledge.
This illustrates the source of our disagreement. A book cannot contain knowledge. It only contains information. The knowledge of what it is like to see read cannot be written down in a book, nor acquired by reading it, any more than a cat could be stored in a book, and then produced by reading it. Only a description of the knowledge can be stored in the book. And this is all that Physicalism requires.
Mary gains whatever neural connections arise from seeing red.
Is there something about that statement that is difficult to understand? Do you not understand it, or do you disagree with it?
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Under physicalism those nerual connections must be reducable to perceivable physical facts. Those facts are all that there is. Those facts are in the first book.
Those facts are not all there is. The facts are not the neural connections. They are a description of the neural connections. The neural connections are not in the book, only a description of them is. Reading the book will not give Mary those neural connections. It will only give her a description of them.
But the performance of the brain process must be reducable to perceivable physical facts. Those facts are all that there is. We will put those facts in one of the books.
Where on Earth did you get the idea that Physicalism claims that physical reality is made of facts? This is absurd!
I can't put a dog into a book, why should I be able to put a brain state in a book?
UCE,
I am not going to respond to you line by line anymore, since I have already responded to all the points you are making before. I will just say once again, that I do not accept your assertion that my mind exists only for me. That is the premise upon which your entire "mind is different from brain" argument depends, and it is completely unjustified.
Dr. Stupid