237474

(2000) Synthese 124 (2).

Physicalism, qualia inversion, and affective states

Neil Campbell

pp. 239-255

I argue that the inverted spectrum hypothesis is nota possibility we should take seriously. The principlereason is that if someone's qualia were inverted inthe specified manner there is reason to believe thephenomenal difference would manifest itself inbehaviour. This is so for two reasons. First, Isuggest that qualia, including phenomenal colours, arepartly constituted by an affective component whichwould be inverted along with the connected qualia. Theresulting affective inversions will, given theintimate connections that exist between emotions andbehaviour, likely manifest themselves in behaviour, inwhich case the underlying phenomenal differences canbe functionally captured. Second, I argue that othersense modalities lack the structural featuresnecessary for undetectable inversion which, because oftheir analogy with colour qualia, weakens theplausibility of such an inversion in the original caseof vision.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1023/A:1005237026544

Full citation:

Campbell, N. (2000). Physicalism, qualia inversion, and affective states. Synthese 124 (2), pp. 239-255.

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