The Knowledge Argument Against Physicalism
She knew every physical fact about color. But did she know what red looks like?
If Mary learns something new, then her complete physical knowledge was incomplete. This suggests there are non-physical facts about consciousness—specifically, the qualia or subjective qualities of experience. Physicalism, which claims that everything is physical, would therefore be false.
Mary doesn't learn any new facts—she gains a new ability (to recognize and imagine red) or forms a new acquaintance with something she already knew propositionally. Knowing about something and knowing it directly are different modes of the same knowledge, not different knowledge.
Mary is a brilliant scientist who has lived her entire life in a black-and-white room. She has never seen color. But she has studied everything there is to know about the physical nature of color: the wavelengths of light, how the eye processes them, how the brain responds, the neural correlates of color experiences.
She knows that "red" corresponds to light at approximately 700 nanometers. She knows which brain states are activated when someone sees red. She has read every scientific paper, understood every equation, mastered every fact about the physics and neuroscience of color.
One day, Mary is released from her black-and-white room. She steps outside and sees a ripe tomato. For the first time in her life, she experiences the color red.
The question: Does Mary learn something new when she sees red for the first time?
Mary's Room cuts to the heart of consciousness studies. If the argument succeeds, it shows that subjective experience cannot be fully explained by physics—that there's something it's like to see red that goes beyond wavelengths and neurons.
This has profound implications for artificial intelligence. If qualia are non-physical, could a computer ever truly experience color, or would it merely process information about color without any inner experience?
The debate remains unsettled. Some philosophers find it "just obvious" that Mary learns something new. Others insist that intuition misleads us, and that a truly complete physical description would include everything about experience.
Mary's Room reveals deep questions about the nature of mind. Where do you stand?