234651

(2017) Synthese 194 (7).

Revelation and physicalism

Kelly Trogdon

pp. 2345-2366

According to experiential revelation, phenomenal concepts reveal the nature of the phenomenal properties they refer to. Some see experiential revelation as posing a direct challenge to physicalism. The basic idea is this: given experiential revelation, were phenomenal properties physical/functional in nature they would be presented as such when you think of them under phenomenal concepts, but phenomenal concepts don’t present their referents in this way. I argue that, while this argument on a plausible reconstruction fails, the thesis of experiential revelation nevertheless indirectly challenges physicalism. In particular, it potentially undermines the so-called phenomenal concept strategy, a key defense maneuver of the physicalist for responding to dualist arguments concerning experience. The moral is that issues concerning revelation do indeed pose a problem for physicalism, but not for the reasons you might think.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/s11229-016-1055-7

Full citation:

Trogdon, K. (2017). Revelation and physicalism. Synthese 194 (7), pp. 2345-2366.

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