
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Imagine the perfect scientist named Mary, who has access to absolutely every piece of knowledge concerning light and color, yet she has lived her entire life in a monochromatic environment. Mary knows all the equations, wavelengths, and physics that describe the colors of the visible spectrum – except, she has never actually seen color herself. One day, she is finally allowed to walk out of her monochromatic world and immediately sees the color red. The question posed by philosopher Frank Jackson in his famous thought experiment, the Knowledge Argument, is: does Mary learn something new when she experiences the color red for the first time?
By TILImagine the perfect scientist named Mary, who has access to absolutely every piece of knowledge concerning light and color, yet she has lived her entire life in a monochromatic environment. Mary knows all the equations, wavelengths, and physics that describe the colors of the visible spectrum – except, she has never actually seen color herself. One day, she is finally allowed to walk out of her monochromatic world and immediately sees the color red. The question posed by philosopher Frank Jackson in his famous thought experiment, the Knowledge Argument, is: does Mary learn something new when she experiences the color red for the first time?