There is an obvious roadblock when we try to apply this model to experience itself, which, Nagel observes, “doesnot seem to fit the pattern.” “The idea of moving from appearance to reality,” he writes, “makes no sense here.”Suppose we try to reduce experience to an objective phenomenon, a certain configuration of neurons firing, in thestyle of reducing lightning to an electrical discharge. The discovery that lightning is nothing but a kind of electricaldischarge is only possible because the subjective character of lightning-produced experiences is not part of thephenomenon to be reduced. That is, the objective methods of the physical sciences require that we
ignore
thedistinctive subjective character of human experiences. So it is very hard to see how an experience could
just
be theoccurrence of a certain neural configuration, the nature of which is thoroughly objective.One might expect Nagel to conclude that since experiences elude objective inquiry they aren’t physical. Interestinglyenough, he doesn’t: to do so, he writes, “would be a mistake.” Rather, the claim that experiences are entirelyphysical “is a position we cannot understand because we do not at present have any conception of how it might betrue.”* * *The purported lesson of “What Is It Like to Be a Bat?” is that we have no idea how to explain consciousness inphysical terms. Eight years after its publication came another landmark, Frank Jackson’s “Epiphenomenal Qualia,”with a blunter take-home message. (“Qualia” is another term for Nagel’s “subjective character”; the significance of “epiphenomenal” will become clear shortly.) Consciousness is
not
a physical phenomenon, Jackson argues.Physicalism, or materialism, the view (to put it very roughly) that everything is entirely physical, is just false.What Jackson calls his “knowledge argument” against physicalism is disarmingly simple. Imagine, he says, thatMary, a terribly clever student, lives in a black-and-white room and never sees any chromatic colors, like red andgreen. In her room, she is extensively tutored on the science of vision via black-and-white television. EventuallyMary’s expertise is complete: she knows
everything
about the physical processes leading from ripe tomatoesthrough the visual pathways in the brain. Suppose that physicalism is true, and that (visual) experiences are entirelyphysical. Then, because Mary knows
everything
physical about experiences, she ought to know everything aboutexperiences. But, Jackson argues, that is plainly false. Imagine that Mary is released from her cell and shown a ripetomato for the first time. She won’t complacently shrug her shoulders and say, “Ho hum.” Instead, she will gasp withamazement. She will come to
know
something about experiences of red that she didn’t and couldn’t know while inher black-and-white room. She will learn, in Nagel’s terminology, that these experiences have a certain subjectivecharacter. So physicalism is false.(Mary is one of philosophy’s more memorable fictional characters, so it is appropriate that she has achieved theliterary cachet of featuring prominently in David Lodge’s 2002 novel
Thinks
. . .)While Nagel’s paper emphasizes the deep puzzle of how consciousness could be nothing but physical activity in thebrain, “Epiphenomenal Qualia” is entirely devoid of such mystery-mongering. The puzzle isn’t so deep, Jacksonthinks: We can’t understand how physicalism might be true because it
isn’t
true. Digestion, glaciation,photosynthesis, and the like are entirely physical phenomena, and one would have hoped that ultimately everyphenomenon would fall under the umbrella of the physical sciences. Alas, that hope is dashed by the knowledgeargument. The argument shows that a purely physical theory of the universe is incomplete: to account for
everything
, we have to recognize nonphysical qualities, namely “qualia,” or the subjective character of experiences.Well, so much the worse for physicalism, you might think. Not so fast, though: to accept the conclusion of theknowledge argument is to occupy an uncomfortable position that is flagged by the eponymous “epiphenomenal.”Epiphenomenalism is the doctrine that nothing mental ever causes anything physical. To borrow an analogy fromWilliam James, the epiphenomenalist thinks that mental phenomena are like shadows—they are produced by andaccompany material objects like sticks and stones, but shadows themselves never play any role in explaining whysticks break and stones fall. Hence the title of Jackson’s paper: he takes the knowledge argument, in establishingthat the subjective character of experience is nonphysical, to also show that it is epiphenomenal.Suppose someone waves her hand. What causes her hand to move? The answer, presumably, is a verycomplicated story involving the firing of neurons in her primary motor cortex, the transmission of these signals to thespinal cord, and the contraction of muscle fibers in her hand. Importantly, this story is entirely physical—nononphysical subjective character is needed to get her hand moving. Now suppose that the subject is told “wave your hand if you have an experience with the distinctive subjective character associated with experiences of red things.”
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