Marys Room A philosophical thought experiment Eleanor Nelsen

Imagine a brilliant neuroscientist
named Mary.

Mary lives in a black and white room,

she only reads black and white books,

and her screens only display
black and white.

But even though she has never seen color,
Mary is an expert in color vision

and knows everything ever discovered
about its physics and biology.

She knows how different
wavelengths of light

stimulate three types of cone cells
in the retina,

and she knows how electrical signals

travel down the optic nerve
into the brain.

There, they create patterns
of neural activity

that correspond to the millions
of colors most humans can distinguish.

Now imagine that one day,

Mary’s black and white screen
malfunctions

and an apple appears in color.

For the first time,

she can experience something
that she’s known about for years.

Does she learn anything new?

Is there anything about perceiving color
that wasn’t captured in all her knowledge?

Philosopher Frank Jackson proposed
this thought experiment,

called Mary’s room, in 1982.

He argued that if Mary already knew
all the physical facts about color vision,

and experiencing color still teaches
her something new,

then mental states, like color perception,

can’t be completely described
by physical facts.

The Mary’s room thought experiment

describes what philosophers call
the knowledge argument,

that there are non-physical properties
and knowledge

which can only be discovered
through conscious experience.

The knowledge argument contradicts
the theory of physicalism,

which says that everything,
including mental states,

has a physical explanation.

To most people hearing Mary’s story,

it seems intuitively obvious
that actually seeing color

will be totally different
than learning about it.

Therefore, there must be some quality
of color vision

that transcends its physical description.

The knowledge argument isn’t just
about color vision.

Mary’s room uses color vision
to represent conscious experience.

If physical science can’t entirely
explain color vision,

then maybe it can’t entirely explain
other conscious experiences either.

For instance, we could know every
physical detail

about the structure and function
of someone else’s brain,

but still not understand
what it feels like to be that person.

These ineffable experiences
have properties called qualia,

subjective qualities that you can’t
accurately describe or measure.

Qualia are unique to the person
experiencing them,

like having an itch,

being in love,

or feeling bored.

Physical facts can’t completely explain
mental states like this.

Philosophers interested
in artificial intelligence

have used the knowledge argument

to theorize that recreating
a physical state

won’t necessarily recreate
a corresponding mental state.

In other words,

building a computer which mimicked
the function of every single neuron

of the human brain

won’t necessarily create a conscious
computerized brain.

Not all philosophers agree that
the Mary’s room experiment is useful.

Some argue that her extensive knowledge
of color vision

would have allowed her to create
the same mental state

produced by actually seeing the color.

The screen malfunction wouldn’t
show her anything new.

Others say that her knowledge
was never complete in the first place

because it was based only
on those physical facts

that can be conveyed in words.

Years after he proposed it,

Jackson actually reversed his own
stance on his thought experiment.

He decided that even
Mary’s experience of seeing red

still does correspond to a measurable
physical event in the brain,

not unknowable qualia beyond
physical explanation.

But there still isn’t a definitive answer

to the question of whether Mary would
learn anything new

when she sees the apple.

Could it be that there are fundamental
limits to what we can know

about something we can’t experience?

And would this mean there are certain
aspects of the universe

that lie permanently beyond
our comprehension?

Or will science and philosophy allow
us to overcome our mind’s limitations?

想象一下一位才华横溢的神经科学家,
名叫玛丽。

玛丽住在一个黑白的房间里,

她只看黑白的书

,她的屏幕只显示
黑白。

但即使她从未见过颜色,
玛丽也是色觉方面的专家,

并且知道
关于它的物理学和生物学的一切发现。

她知道不同
波长的光如何

刺激视网膜中的三种视锥细胞

并且她知道电信号如何

沿着视神经传播
到大脑。

在那里,他们创建

了与大多数人类可以区分的数百万种颜色相对应的神经活动模式

现在想象有一天,

玛丽的黑白屏幕

出现故障,出现了一个彩色的苹果。

她第一次

可以体验
到她多年来都知道的事情。

她有没有学到什么新东西?

有什么关于
她所有知识都没有捕捉到的颜色感知吗?

哲学家弗兰克杰克逊在 1982 年提出了
这个思想实验

,称为玛丽的房间。

他认为,如果玛丽已经知道
关于色觉的所有物理事实,

并且体验色彩仍然教会
了她一些新的东西,

那么心理状态,如色觉,

就不能 完全
用物理事实来描述。

玛丽的房间思想实验

描述了哲学家所谓
的知识论证,

即存在

只能
通过有意识的经验发现的非物理属性和知识。

知识
论与物理主义理论相矛盾,物理主义

理论认为一切事物,
包括心理状态,

都有物理解释。

对于大多数听过玛丽的故事的人来说,

直观地很明显
,实际看到颜色

与了解颜色完全不同。

因此,必须有

某种超越其物理描述的色觉质量。

知识论点不仅仅是
关于色觉。

玛丽的房间使用色觉
来代表有意识的体验。

如果物理科学不能完全
解释色觉,

那么也许它也不能完全解释
其他有意识的体验。

例如,我们可以知道别人大脑

结构和功能
的每一个物理细节,

但仍然不了解
成为那个人的感觉。

这些不可言喻的体验
具有称为感受

质的属性,即您无法
准确描述或衡量的主观品质。

Qualia 对于体验它们的人来说是独一无二的

比如发痒

、恋爱

或感到无聊。

物理事实不能完全解释这样的
心理状态。

对人工智能感兴趣的哲学家

已经使用知识论据

来推测
重建物理状态

不一定会
重建相应的心理状态。

换句话说,

建造一台模仿

人脑每一个神经元功能的计算机

并不一定能创造出一个有意识的
计算机化大脑。

并非所有哲学家都
同意玛丽的房间实验是有用的。

一些人认为,她广泛
的色觉知识

将使她能够创造
出与实际看到颜色相同的心理状态

屏幕故障不会
向她显示任何新内容。

也有人说,她的知识
一开始就不完整,

因为它只是基于

那些可以用语言表达的物理事实。

在他提出这个想法多年后,

杰克逊实际上改变了
自己在思想实验上的立场。

他认为,即使
玛丽看到红色的经历

仍然与大脑中可测量的
物理事件相对应,

而不是物理解释之外的不可知的感受质

但是

对于玛丽看到苹果后是否会学到新东西的问题,仍然没有一个明确的答案

对于我们无法体验的事物,我们所能知道的是否存在根本的限制?

这是否意味着
宇宙的某些方面

永远超出
了我们的理解范围?

或者科学和哲学会让
我们克服思想的局限吗?