Qualia as properties of experiences
Qualia as properties of experiences
Some of our mental states are such that there is something it's like to have them. There is something it's like to have a visual experience of a predominantly red and orange scene, and that is different from what it's like to have a visual experience of a predominantly black and blue scene. We can say that a mental state is phenomenally conscious just in case there is something it's like to have that mental state, and take qualia to be the properties that give such mental states this feature. This chapter clarifies what it is to be minimally ontologically committed to qualia as properties. While some philosophers draw anti-physicalist conclusions from considerations based on qualia and phenomenal consciousness, others find qualia too problematic to reify. This chapter offers a ‘neutral’ conception of qualia according to which qualia are understood as properties of experiences in virtue of which there is something it's like to have those experiences. On this conception, from the existence of qualia alone, nothing substantial about physicalism or anti-physicalism follows.
Baysan, Umut
69cc8c93-08a0-4b88-8192-eb5a22fa82e3
22 December 2023
Baysan, Umut
69cc8c93-08a0-4b88-8192-eb5a22fa82e3
Baysan, Umut
(2023)
Qualia as properties of experiences.
In,
Fisher, A.R.J. and Maurin, Anna-Sofia
(eds.)
The Routledge Handbook of Properties.
Routledge.
(doi:10.4324/9781003246077).
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Book Section
Abstract
Some of our mental states are such that there is something it's like to have them. There is something it's like to have a visual experience of a predominantly red and orange scene, and that is different from what it's like to have a visual experience of a predominantly black and blue scene. We can say that a mental state is phenomenally conscious just in case there is something it's like to have that mental state, and take qualia to be the properties that give such mental states this feature. This chapter clarifies what it is to be minimally ontologically committed to qualia as properties. While some philosophers draw anti-physicalist conclusions from considerations based on qualia and phenomenal consciousness, others find qualia too problematic to reify. This chapter offers a ‘neutral’ conception of qualia according to which qualia are understood as properties of experiences in virtue of which there is something it's like to have those experiences. On this conception, from the existence of qualia alone, nothing substantial about physicalism or anti-physicalism follows.
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Published date: 22 December 2023
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Local EPrints ID: 505293
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/505293
PURE UUID: 61e6c46b-4c3e-42c3-9a55-254c8e2ebf67
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Date deposited: 06 Oct 2025 16:44
Last modified: 07 Oct 2025 02:17
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Author:
Umut Baysan
Editor:
A.R.J. Fisher
Editor:
Anna-Sofia Maurin
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