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The Modal Argument

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The Modal Argument Review: The Hard Problem Remember that there are three arguments that make consciousness a hard problem. 1. Knowledge Argument 2. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Modal Argument


1
The Modal Argument
2
Review The Hard Problem
  • Remember that there are three arguments that make
    consciousness a hard problem.1. Knowledge
    Argument2. Modal Argument3. Explanatory Gap
    Argument
  • Hard Problem we do not know how to go about
    solving it isolating neural or computational
    mechanisms is not enough.

3
1. The Knowledge Argument
  • P1 Physicalism says that all facts are physical
    facts.
  • P2 In the room, Mary has complete physical
    knowledge of color perception.
  • P3 When she leaves the room, Mary acquires new
    knowledge (i.e. what it is like to see red).
  • C Physicalism if false there are facts (i.e.
    about phenomenal properties) which escape the
    physicalist story.

4
Response 1
  • P3? Churchland maintains that this is possibly
    false.
  • We do not understand as much about the brain as
    Mary does.
  • So perhaps Mary would say (when shown tomato)
    Ahh, just as I thought.

5
Response 2
  • Equivocation? What does it mean to say that Mary
    gains new knowledge when she sees the tomato?
  • Churchland argues that, even if Mary does acquire
    new knowledge, this does not mean that there are
    facts that escape physicalism.
  • Mary merely gains a new way of knowing old facts.

6
Worry
  • Are Churchlands responses consistent?
  • It seems that his response to Jackson is that (a)
    Mary would know, before release, what it is like
    to see red and (b) Mary would learn what it
    is like to see red, but this new knowledge would
    not undermine physicalism.
  • Charitable reading Mary might very well know,
    but even if she doesnt, it would not undermine
    physicalism.

7
2. Modal Argument
  • Today we turn to the second argument in the
    trilogy.
  • This argument was presented by Saul Kripke (b.
    1940-) in a series of lectures he gave at
    Princeton in 1970.

8
Zombies
  • Kripkes argument is based upon what philosophers
    have called the zombie hunch.
  • So let us be clear philosophical zombies are
    nothing like Hollywood zombies.

9
Hollywood Zombies
  • Hollywood zombies are reanimated dead-people who
    like to eat human flesh.
  • They often have strange behavioral features (they
    usually walk slowly and awkwardly, although in 28
    Days Later they run really fast).

10
Philosophical Zombies
  • They look and behave just like you and me.
  • But their defining feature is that they do not
    have any consciousness.
  • So as philosophical zombie is physical identical
    to a normal human being, but there is nothing it
    is like to be them.

11
Challenge to Physicalism
  • Question Why are philosophers worried about such
    Zombies?
  • Answer They are a serious threat to Physicalism.
    Physicalists cannot allow that you can have a
    zombie twin which is physically identical to you
    but who lacks consciousness.
  • If all properties are physical properties, then
    someone who shares all your physical properties
    must have the same consciousness.

12
The Zombie Argument
  • A thumbnail sketch of the argument might look
    something like thisP1 Physicalism says that
    all truths are physical truths.P2 Zombie twins
    are possible.C Physicalism is false.

13
Physicalist response?
  • It is tempting to say, in response, that this
    merely shows that mind-body identity is a
    contingent truth.
  • (Note This is what JJC Smart says in response to
    the objection that we can conceive of being
    turned to stone, yet feel pain).
  • To make heads or tails of this response, we need
    some modal terminology.

14
Modality
  • Talk of modalities refers to the way we qualify
    the truth of judgments with respect to possible
    worlds.
  • Possible world maximally complete (i.e. leaves
    out no information) consistent (i.e.
    non-contradictory) set of facts about the world. 
  • Contingent truths These are truths that are
    true in some worlds, but false in others.
    Necessary truths These are truths that are
    true in all worlds.
  • So the temptation is to say that MB is
    contingently true in our world. Thus, the fact
    that we can imagine zombies only shows that there
    are other worlds in which the identity does not
    hold.

15
Kripke on A Posteriori Necessity
  • Kripke argues that this is a mistake. He
    maintains that natural kind terms such as pain
    and c-fiber firing are rigid designators that
    have the same reference in every possible world.
  • This entails that the following premise is
    trueP1 If MB, then NEC (MB).

16
Clarifications
  • It is contingent that mean kinetic energy causes
    sensation of heat but it is necessary that
    physical heat MKE.
  • We often think that this theoretical identity is
    contingent because it is a posteriori (it
    required experience and scientific method to
    discover it).
  • Philosophers used to think that all necessary
    truths were analytic but Kripke convinced most
    people that there are a posteriori necessary
    truths.

17
The Modal Argument
  • P1 If pain c-fiber firing, then NEC (pain
    c-fiber firing). P2 We can conceive of
    zombies whose c-fibers are firing but who do not
    feel pain.P3 Conceivability entails
    metaphysical possibility. P4 Zombies are
    metaphysically possible. C It is false that
    pain c-fiber firing.

18
Kripkes Blocked Move
  • Kripke recognizes that physicalists might offer
    the following move we can explain away the
    zombie hunch and deny P4.
  • How so? Because it also seems possible that we
    could have water without H20. But they are
    necessarily identical. So we cannot trust such
    hunches. They are just modal illusions.
  • Question Why does Kripke maintain that this
    strategy will not work in the case of pain?

19
Kripkes Blocked Move
20
Kripkes Blocked Move
  • Kripke agrees that materialists can explain away
    the water hunch. But this will not work for
    the case of pain.
  • The reason is that we recognize instances of
    WATER through their accidental features. It just
    so happens that water appears to us as clear,
    etc. But it might appear differently to
    creatures on Mars.
  • But we cannot say this with PAIN. We recognize
    pain through its essential property. If it
    didnt hurt, it would not be pain!

21
Hills Reply
  • Question How does Hill respond to Kripke? Does
    he manage to avoid the block?
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