Win,
I'm not sue what you mean by "artificially stimulated ... to think it is seeing red." If you mean, say, pressing on your eye near your nose so that a blue spot appears at the opposite side of your visual field (try it, it's cool) without there being a blue object out there in the world, I think you're really seeing blue.
But maybe I'm misunderstanding you.
No, that's pretty much exactly what I was getting at. In other words, would you say that the
content of phenomenal consciousness is logically dictated by the physical brain activity, but that the
existence of phenomenal consciousness cannot be derived from the physical brain activity?
Such a scenario could be modeled by saying that the physical World is a causally closed set, A. Phenomenal consciousness is a distinct set, B, which is not causally closed, but whose state is determined by the state of A.
One could imagine that the state of B is completely determined by the state of A, according to some set of logical rules, but that the existence of B is not required for the existence of A. In other words, a completely one-way interaction between A and B.
This would also imply that it is not possible, using information only available in set A, to determine the existence of set B, or the nature of the rules that describe how set B depends on set A.
Is this an accurate description of your position?
Does Mary possess information processing capabilities other than those performed by her brain? Does she possess any way of storing information, other than physically storing it in her brain?
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Information processing, no. Storing, no.
Briefly, information is physically stored and processed by your brain. That physical instatiation of the information, though, doesn't exhaust the "facts." Every time that information is physically realized in your brain, in fact in any information processing system of a certain class, it is simultaneously phenomenally realized. The phenomenal realization of the information contains a new fact, or perhaps is a new fact.
When I say phenomenally realized, I mean represented within phenomenal consciousness.
The thing I am having a problem with, is the meaning of "phenomenally realized" information.
When you say "physically realized information", I know what that means. It means either storage or processing of the information (or a combination of the two), by some sort of physical process. I would thus be inclined to interpret the phrase "phenomenally realized information" to mean some sort of phenomenal storage or processing of the information.
If this is not what it means, then what does it mean? To put it another way, the word "to realize" is a verb, which describes what is being done to the thing being realized. What is being done to the information when it is "phenomenally realized"?
Paul,
Why do you consider the neural connections formed when I see red not to be "facts" about red? They are not conceptual facts about red, but they certainly are empirical facts necessary to see red. Separating them from "facts" seems to confuse matters.
Strictly speaking, the neural connections are not facts. They are physical thing. Facts are information. There are certainly facts
about those neural connections. For example, the fact that Mary has those neural connections are a fact.
That said, the neural connections do encode facts about red, which is to say that there is information about red that Mary could extract from the memory of seeing red. But she already has that information.
If we all agree that learning these empirical facts does not constitute a violation of physicalism, then my question is only one of definition. But I'm suspicious from reading about the KA over the past few days that many people either do not acknowledge the existence of these facts, or think that their acquisition does violate physicalism. So it's an important issue.
Unfortunately, we do not all agree with this. Some of the people here are still trying to assert that the fact that Mary cannot gain the memory of seeing red from reading a book, somehow invalidates physicalism. Each of them seem to have different reasons for thinking this is the case, though.
Dr. Stupid