Phenomenal concept strategy


The phenomenal concept strategy is an approach within philosophy of mind to provide a physicalist response to anti-physicalist arguments like the explanatory gap and philosophical zombies. The name was coined by Daniel Stoljar. As David Chalmers put it, PCS "locates the gap in the relationship between our concepts of physical processes and our concepts of consciousness, rather than in the relationship between physical processes and consciousness themselves." The idea is that if we can explain why we think there's an explanatory gap, this will defuse the motivation to question physicalism.

Overview

PCS advocates typically subscribe to what Chalmers has called "type-B materialism", which holds that there is an epistemic but not ontological gap between physics and subjective experience. PCS maintains that our concepts are dualistic, but reality is monistic, in a similar way as "heat" and "molecular motion" are two different concepts that refer to the same property. However, phenomenal concepts are different from other concepts in that they incline us to see an epistemic gap. PCS suggests that physicalist explanations "cannot feel satisfactory since the concepts used in the physical explanation don't entail any applications of the phenomenal concepts in terms of which the explanandum is characterized."
PCS would help physicalists answer the knowledge argument because upon seeing red, Mary would have new thoughts about phenomenal concepts, even though those thoughts would only re-express physical facts she already knew. Likewise, we can conceive of zombies even if they aren't possible because when we think about their functional/physical characteristics, we don't also conjure thoughts about phenomenal concepts.
David Papineau coined the term antipathetic fallacy to refer to the way in which we fail to see phenomenal experience in brain processing. It's the opposite of the pathetic fallacy of seeing consciousness in non-minds.

Types of concepts

Chalmers outlines several ways in which phenomenal concepts might be distinctive:

Recognitional concepts

These are so-called "type-demonstratives" in which we point to "one of those". For instance:
Peter Carruthers suggests that phenomenal concepts are purely recognitional, which means
  1. they apply directly to instances
  2. they are conceptually isolated, i.e., don't have a priori connections with other concepts.

    Distinct conceptual roles

We think about physical and phenomenal concepts in different ways.

Indexical concepts

Several philosophers have suggested that phenomenal concepts denote brain states indexically, in a similar way as saying "now" picks out a particular time. Even given full knowledge of physics, additional indexical information is required to say where and when one is.

Quotational/constitutional concepts

Some contend that phenomenal states are part of the concepts that refer to them. For instance, Papineau suggests that phenomenal concepts are quotational, like saying "That state: ___."
Katalin Balog defends a constitutional account of phenomenal concepts, in which "token experiences serve as modes of presentation of the phenomenal properties they instantiate." For instance, the concept of pain is partly constituted by a token experience of pain. She claims this position helps resolve the explanatory gap because an a priori description alone doesn't suffice to express the concept; in addition, a direct experiential constitution is required. While it seems like physical/functional information about tells us all there is about it, we feel something more for phenomenality because we "have a 'substantive' grasp of its nature."
Papineau takes a similar position. He claims that normal physical identity statements involve two descriptions, which we can associate in our minds. In contrast, we think about a phenomenal concept by either "actually undergoing the experience" or at least by imagining it, and this creates a "what-it’s-likeness" sensation. Then:
Papineau compares the situation to the use–mention distinction: Phenomenal concepts directly use the experiences to which they refer, while physical descriptions merely mention them.

Criticisms

Chalmers's "master argument"

David Chalmers presents "A Master Argument" against PCS. He defines C as the PCS thesis that
  1. humans have psychological features
  2. that explain why we have the apparent epistemic gaps with consciousness,
  3. and this explanation is purely physical.
All three of these must hold for PCS to succeed. He defines P as all physical facts. Then he poses a dilemma:
Regardless of which horn is true, C is invalidated.

Reply

Carruthers and Veillet argue that Chalmers's argument commits a fallacy of equivocation between first-person and third-person phenomenal concepts, but the authors reformulate it to avoid that problem. They proceed to attack the revised argument by denying the premise that if zombies must have third-person phenomenal concepts, then phenomenal concepts can't account for the explanatory gap. In particular, they suggest that, pace Chalmers, people and zombies would have the same epistemic situation even though the contents of their situations would be different. For instance, a person's phenomenal concept would have content of a phenomenal state, while the "schmenomenal" concept of a zombie would have content about a "schmenomenal" state. A zombie "is correct when he says that he is conscious, because he isn't saying that he has phenomenal states as we understand them. He is correct because he means that he has schmenomenal states, and he has them." So people and zombies can both have true beliefs justified in similar ways, even if those beliefs are about different things.
Chalmers’s “Master Argument” relies on the assumption that his Zombie argument is true. Critics of the argument have variously disputed either the first or second premise. Many philosophers have offered objections to the conceivability argument.