In Frank Jackson's "Mary's Room" experiment, Mary is imagined to have learned something when she sees color for the first time. Subsequent philosophers, such as Michael Tye, have suggested that she did in fact gain a type of knowledge-that because she could now say things like "Red looks like that."
However, I think we need to be careful when considering what knowledge Mary may have possibly gained. One problem I see with the idea that Mary gained knowledge-that is that it could very easily lead us to assigning to Mary propositions that are incoherent. My reason for thinking this is found in Wittgenstein's private language argument. As a refresher, Wittgenstein argued that a language that is understandable by only one person is inherently impossible. For example, let's say a person designates S to refer to some sensation he has on a given day. There is no way to verify that S does in fact refer to that sensation, and therefore whatever is meant by the speaker when he or says "S" will, no matter what, be right. S has no definition aside from its association with a given sensation, and so if we were to ask "Was this sensation S?" we have no actual definition of S to compare the sensation to. Therefore, it seems as though we can't actually have meaningful conversation using S.
This seems to be a problem when attempting to directly discuss any qualitative aspect of an experience. When Mary says "Red looks like that," she is supposedly referring to the qualitative nature of what seeing red is like -- similar to saying "Seeing red is like S." Well, if we are saying that S cannot meaningfully refer, then it would seem like statements such as "Seeing red is like S" are incoherent.
Intuitively, I think "Red looks like that" is coherent. What do you guys make of this? I have long been skeptical of the idea that Mary gained additional knowledge-that, but I'm not sure this particular critique holds water.
Thoughts?
However, I think we need to be careful when considering what knowledge Mary may have possibly gained. One problem I see with the idea that Mary gained knowledge-that is that it could very easily lead us to assigning to Mary propositions that are incoherent. My reason for thinking this is found in Wittgenstein's private language argument. As a refresher, Wittgenstein argued that a language that is understandable by only one person is inherently impossible. For example, let's say a person designates S to refer to some sensation he has on a given day. There is no way to verify that S does in fact refer to that sensation, and therefore whatever is meant by the speaker when he or says "S" will, no matter what, be right. S has no definition aside from its association with a given sensation, and so if we were to ask "Was this sensation S?" we have no actual definition of S to compare the sensation to. Therefore, it seems as though we can't actually have meaningful conversation using S.
This seems to be a problem when attempting to directly discuss any qualitative aspect of an experience. When Mary says "Red looks like that," she is supposedly referring to the qualitative nature of what seeing red is like -- similar to saying "Seeing red is like S." Well, if we are saying that S cannot meaningfully refer, then it would seem like statements such as "Seeing red is like S" are incoherent.
Intuitively, I think "Red looks like that" is coherent. What do you guys make of this? I have long been skeptical of the idea that Mary gained additional knowledge-that, but I'm not sure this particular critique holds water.
Thoughts?