Robert Kirk’s Attempted Intellectual Filicide: Are Phenomenal Zombies Hurt?
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Abstract
In the paper, I discuss Robert Kirk’s attempt to refute the
zombie argument against materialism by demonstrating, “in a way
that is intuitively appealing as well as cogent”, that the idea of phenomenal zombies involves incoherence. Kirk’s argues that if one admits that a world of zombies z is conceivable, one should also admit
the conceivability of a certain transformation from such a world to a
world z* that satisfies a description D, and it is arguable that D is
incoherent. From which, Kirk suggests, it follows that the idea of
zombies is incoherent. I argue that Kirk’s argument has several minor
deficiencies and two major flaws. First, he takes for granted that
cognitive mental states are physical (cognitive physicalism), although
a zombist is free to—and would better—reject this view. Second, he
confuses elements of different scenarios of transformation, none of
which results in the incoherent description D.
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Citation
Sepetyi D. Robert Kirk’s Attempted Intellectual Filicide: Are Phenomenal Zombies Hurt? / D. Sepetyi // Organon F. - 2021. -P. 1-31. - https://www.organonf.com/journal/dmytrosepetyi/. - ISSN 2585-7150