fbpx
Wikipedia

Philosophical zombie

A philosophical zombie (or "p-zombie") is a being in a thought experiment in philosophy of mind that is physically identical to a normal person but does not have conscious experience.[1]

For example, if a philosophical zombie were poked with a sharp object, it would not feel any pain, but it would behave exactly the way any conscious human would. Philosophical zombie arguments are used against forms of physicalism and in defense of the "hard problem of consciousness", which is the problem of accounting in physical terms for subjective, intrinsic, first-person, what-it's-like-ness experiences. Proponents of philosophical zombie arguments, such as the philosopher David Chalmers, argue that since a philosophical zombie is by definition physically identical to a conscious person, even its logical possibility refutes physicalism, because it establishes the existence of conscious experience as a further fact.[2] Philosopher Daniel Stoljar points out that zombies need not be utterly without subjective states, that even a subtle psychological difference between two physically identical people, such as in the taste of coffee, is enough to refute physicalism.[3] Such arguments have been criticized by many philosophers. Some physicalists, such as Daniel Dennett, argue that philosophical zombies are logically incoherent and thus impossible, or that all humans are philosophical zombies;[4][5] others, such as Christopher Hill, argue that philosophical zombies are coherent but metaphysically impossible.[6]

History edit

Philosophical zombies are associated with David Chalmers, but it was philosopher Robert Kirk who first used the term "zombie" in this context in 1974. Before that, Keith Campbell made a similar argument in his 1970 book Body and Mind, using the term "Imitation Man."[7] Chalmers further developed and popularized the idea in his work.

There has been a lively debate about what the zombie argument shows.[7] Critics who primarily argue that zombies are not conceivable include Daniel Dennett, Nigel J. T. Thomas,[8] David Braddon-Mitchell,[9] and Robert Kirk;[10] critics who assert mostly that conceivability does not entail possibility include Katalin Balog,[11] Keith Frankish,[12] Christopher Hill,[6] and Stephen Yablo;[13] and critics who question the logical validity of the argument include George Bealer.[14]

In his 2019 update to the article on philosophical zombies in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Kirk summed up the current state of the debate:

In spite of the fact that the arguments on both sides have become increasingly sophisticated — or perhaps because of it — they have not become more persuasive. The pull in each direction remains strong.[15]

A 2013 survey of professional philosophers by Bourget and Chalmers found that 36% said P Zombies were conceivable but metaphysically impossible; 23% said they were metaphysically possible; 16% said they were inconceivable; and 25% responded "other".[16] In 2020, the same survey yielded almost identical results: "inconceivable" 16%, conceivable but impossible 37%, "metaphysically possible" 24%, and "other" 23%.[17]

Types of zombies edit

Though philosophical zombies are widely used in thought experiments, the detailed articulation of the concept is not always the same. P-zombies were introduced primarily to argue against specific types of physicalism such as materialism and behaviorism, according to which mental states exist solely as behavior. Belief, desire, thought, consciousness, and so on, are only behavior (whether external behavior or internal behavior) or tendencies towards behaviors. A p-zombie behaviorally indistinguishable from a normal human being but lacking conscious experiences is therefore not logically possible according to the behaviorist,[18] so an appeal to the logical possibility of a p-zombie furnishes an argument that behaviorism is false. Proponents of zombie arguments generally accept that p-zombies are not physically possible, while opponents necessarily deny that they are metaphysically or, in some cases, even logically possible.

The unifying idea of the zombie is that of a human completely lacking conscious experience. It is possible to distinguish various zombie subtypes used in different thought experiments as follows:

  • A behavioral zombie is behaviorally indistinguishable from a human.
  • A neurological zombie has a human brain and is generally physiologically indistinguishable from a human.[19]
  • A soulless zombie lacks a soul.
  • An imperfect zombie or imp-zombie is like a p-zombie but has slightly different behavior than a regular human. They are important in the context of the mind-evolution problem.[20]
  • A zombie universe is identical to our world in all physical ways, except no being in it has qualia.

Zombie arguments edit

Zombie arguments often support lines of reasoning that aim to show that zombies are metaphysically possible in order to support some form of dualism – in this case the view that the world includes two kinds of substance (or perhaps two kinds of property): the mental and the physical.[21]

In contrast to dualism, in physicalism, material facts determine all other facts. Since any fact other than that of consciousness may be held to be the same for a p-zombie and for a normal conscious human, it follows that physicalism must hold that p-zombies are either not possible or are the same as normal humans.

The zombie argument is a version of general modal arguments against physicalism, such as that of Saul Kripke.[22][page needed] Further such arguments were notably advanced in the 1970s by Thomas Nagel (1970; 1974) and Robert Kirk (1974), but the general argument was most famously developed in detail by David Chalmers in The Conscious Mind (1996).

According to Chalmers, one can coherently conceive of an entire zombie world, a world physically indistinguishable from this one but entirely lacking conscious experience. Since such a world is conceivable, Chalmers claims, it is metaphysically possible, which is all the argument requires. Chalmers writes: "Zombies are probably not naturally possible: they probably cannot exist in our world, with its laws of nature."[23] The outline structure of Chalmers's version of the zombie argument is as follows:

  1. According to physicalism, all that exists in our world (including consciousness) is physical.
  2. Thus, if physicalism is true, a metaphysically possible world in which all physical facts are the same as those of the actual world must contain everything that exists in our actual world. In particular, conscious experience must exist in such a possible world.
  3. Chalmers argues that we can conceive of a world physically indistinguishable from our world but in which there is no consciousness (a zombie world). From this (Chalmers argues) it follows that such a world is metaphysically possible.
  4. Therefore, physicalism is false. (The conclusion follows from 2. and 3. by modus tollens.)

The above is a strong formulation of the zombie argument. There are other formulations of zombie-type arguments that follow the same general form. The premises of the general zombie argument are implied by the premises of all the specific zombie arguments.

A general zombie argument is in part motivated by potential disagreements between various anti-physicalist views. For example, an anti-physicalist view can consistently assert that p-zombies are metaphysically impossible but that inverted qualia (such as inverted spectra) or absent qualia (partial zombiehood) are metaphysically possible. Premises regarding inverted qualia or partial zombiehood can replace premises regarding p-zombies to produce variations of the zombie argument.

The metaphysical possibility of a physically indistinguishable world with either inverted qualia or partial zombiehood implies that physical truths do not metaphysically necessitate phenomenal truths.

To formulate the general form of the zombie argument, take the sentence P to be true if and only if the conjunct of all microphysical truths of our world obtain, and take the sentence Q to be true if some phenomenal truth that obtains in the actual world obtains. The general argument goes as follows.

  1. It is conceivable that P is true and Q is not true.
  2. If it is conceivable that P is true and Q is not true then it is metaphysically possible that P is true and Q not true.
  3. If it is metaphysically possible that P is true and Q is not true then physicalism is false.
  4. Therefore, physicalism is false.[24]

Q can be false in a possible world if any of the following obtains: (1) there exists at least one invert relative to the actual world; (2) there is at least one absent quale relative to the actual world; (3) all actually conscious beings are p-zombies (all actual qualia are absent qualia).

Another way to construe the zombie hypothesis is epistemically – as a problem of causal explanation, rather than as a problem of logical or metaphysical possibility. The "explanatory gap" – also called the "hard problem of consciousness" – is the claim that (to date) no one has provided a convincing causal explanation of how and why we are conscious. It is a manifestation of the very same gap that (to date) no one has provided a convincing causal explanation of how and why we are not zombies.[25]

The philosophical zombie argument can also be seen through the counterfeit bill example brought forth by Amy Kind. Kind's example centers around a counterfeit 20-dollar bill made to be exactly like an authentic 20-dollar bill. This is logically possible. And yet the counterfeit bill would not have the same value. Are people really conceiving of zombies when they say they are? When philosophers claim that zombies are conceivable, they invariably underestimate the task of conception, and end up imagining something that violates their own definition.

According to Kind, in her book Philosophy of Mind: the basics, The Zombie Argument can be put in this standard form from a dualist point of view:

Zombies, creatures that are microphysically identical to conscious beings but that lack consciousness entirely, are conceivable. If zombies are conceivable then they are possible. Therefore, zombies are possible. If zombies are possible, then consciousness is non-physical. Therefore, consciousness is non-physical.[26]

Responses edit

Galen Strawson argues that it is not possible to establish the conceivability of zombies, so the argument, lacking its first premise, can never get going.[27]

Chalmers has argued that zombies are conceivable, saying, "it certainly seems that a coherent situation is described; I can discern no contradiction in the description."[28]

Many physicalist philosophers[who?] have argued that this scenario eliminates itself by its description; the basis of a physicalist argument is that the world is defined entirely by physicality; thus, a world that was physically identical would necessarily contain consciousness, as consciousness would necessarily be generated from any set of physical circumstances identical to our own.

The zombie argument claims that one can tell by the power of reason that such a "zombie scenario" is metaphysically possible. Chalmers writes, "From the conceivability of zombies, proponents of the argument infer their metaphysical possibility"[23] and argues that this inference, while not generally legitimate, is legitimate for phenomenal concepts such as consciousness since we must adhere to "Kripke's insight that for phenomenal concepts, there is no gap between reference-fixers and reference (or between primary and secondary intentions)."

That is, for phenomenal concepts, conceivability implies possibility. According to Chalmers, whatever is logically possible is also, in the sense relevant here, metaphysically possible.[29]

Another response is the denial of the idea that qualia and related phenomenal notions of the mind are in the first place coherent concepts. Daniel Dennett and others argue that while consciousness and subjective experience exist in some sense, they are not as the zombie argument proponent claims. The experience of pain, for example, is not something that can be stripped off a person's mental life without bringing about any behavioral or physiological differences. Dennett believes that consciousness is a complex series of functions and ideas. If we all can have these experiences the idea of the p-zombie is meaningless.

Dennett argues that "when philosophers claim that zombies are conceivable, they invariably underestimate the task of conception (or imagination), and end up imagining something that violates their own definition".[4][5] He coined the term "zimboes" – p-zombies that have second-order beliefs – to argue that the idea of a p-zombie is incoherent;[30] "Zimboes thinkZ they are conscious, thinkZ they have qualia, thinkZ they suffer pains – they are just 'wrong' (according to this lamentable tradition), in ways that neither they nor we could ever discover!".[5]

Michael Lynch agrees with Dennett, arguing that the zombie conceivability argument forces us to either question whether we actually have consciousness or accept that zombies are not possible. If zombies falsely believe they are conscious, how can we be sure we are not zombies? We may believe we are experiencing conscious mental states when in fact we merely hold a false belief. Lynch thinks denying the possibility of zombies is more reasonable than questioning our own consciousness.[31]

Furthermore, when concept of self is deemed to correspond to physical reality alone (reductive physicalism), philosophical zombies are denied by definition. When a distinction is made in one's mind between a hypothetical zombie and oneself (assumed not to be a zombie), the hypothetical zombie, being a subset of the concept of oneself, must entail a deficit in observables (cognitive systems), a "seductive error"[5] contradicting the original definition of a zombie.

Thomas Metzinger dismisses the argument as no longer relevant to the consciousness community, calling it a weak argument that covertly relies on the difficulty in defining "consciousness" and an "ill-defined folk psychological umbrella term".[32]

Verificationism[1] states that, for words to have meaning, their use must be open to public verification. Since it is assumed that we can talk about our qualia, the existence of zombies is impossible.

Artificial intelligence researcher Marvin Minsky saw the argument as circular. The proposition of the possibility of something physically identical to a human but without subjective experience assumes that the physical characteristics of humans are not what produces those experiences, which is exactly what the argument claims to prove.[33]

Richard Brown agrees that the zombie argument is circular. To show this, he proposes "zoombies", which are creatures nonphysically identical to people in every way and lacking phenomenal consciousness. If zoombies existed, they would refute dualism because they would show that consciousness is not nonphysical, i.e., is physical. Paralleling the argument from Chalmers: It is conceivable that zoombies exist, so it is possible they exist, so dualism is false. Given the symmetry between the zombie and zoombie arguments, we cannot arbitrate the physicalism/dualism question a priori.[34]

Similarly, Gualtiero Piccinini argues that the zombie conceivability argument is circular. Piccinini questions whether the possible worlds where zombies exist are accessible from our world. If physicalism is true in our world, then physicalism is one of the relevant facts about our world for determining whether a possible zombie world is accessible from our world. Therefore, asking whether zombies are metaphysically possible in our world is equivalent to asking whether physicalism is true in our world.[35]

Stephen Yablo's (1998) response is to provide an error theory to account for the intuition that zombies are possible. Notions of what counts as physical and as physically possible change over time so conceptual analysis is not reliable here. Yablo says he is "braced for the information that is going to make zombies inconceivable, even though I have no real idea what form the information is going to take."[36]

The zombie argument is difficult to assess because it brings to light fundamental disagreements about the method and scope of philosophy itself and the nature and abilities of conceptual analysis. Proponents of the zombie argument may think that conceptual analysis is a central part of (if not the only part of) philosophy and that it certainly can do a great deal of philosophical work. But others, such as Dennett, Paul Churchland and W.V.O. Quine, have fundamentally different views. For this reason, discussion of the zombie argument remains vigorous in philosophy.

Some accept modal reasoning in general but deny it in the zombie case. Christopher S. Hill and Brian P. Mclaughlin suggest that the zombie thought experiment combines imagination of a "sympathetic" nature (putting oneself in a phenomenal state) and a "perceptual" nature (imagining becoming aware of something in the outside world). Each type of imagination may work on its own but not work when used at the same time. Hence Chalmers's argument need not go through.[37]: 448 

Moreover, while Chalmers defuses criticisms of the view that conceivability can tell us about possibility, he provides no positive defense of the principle. As an analogy, the generalized continuum hypothesis has no known counterexamples, but this does not mean we must accept it. And indeed, the fact that Chalmers concludes we have epiphenomenal mental states that do not cause our physical behavior seems one reason to reject his principle.[37]: 449–51 

Related thought experiments edit

Frank Jackson's Knowledge argument is based around a hypothetical scientist, Mary, who is forced to view the world through a black-and-white television screen in a black and white room. Mary is a brilliant scientist who knows everything about the neurobiology of vision. Even though she knows everything about color and its perception (e.g. what combination of wavelengths makes the sky seem blue), she has never seen color. If Mary were released from this room and experienced color for the first time, would she learn anything new? Jackson initially believed this supported epiphenomenalism (mental phenomena are the effects, but not the causes, of physical phenomena) but later changed his view to physicalism, suggesting that Mary is simply discovering a new way for her brain to represent qualities that exist in the world.

Swampman is an imaginary character introduced by Donald Davidson. If Davidson goes hiking in a swamp and is struck and killed by a lightning bolt while nearby another lightning bolt spontaneously rearranges a bunch of molecules so that, entirely by coincidence, they take on exactly the same form that Davidson's body had at the moment of his untimely death, then this being, "Swampman", has a brain structurally identical to Davidson's and will thus presumably behave exactly like Davidson. He will return to Davidson's office and write the same essays he would have written, recognize all of his friends and family, and so forth.[38]

John Searle's Chinese room argument deals with the nature of artificial intelligence: it imagines a room in which a conversation is held by means of written Chinese characters that the subject cannot actually read, but is able to manipulate meaningfully using a set of algorithms. Searle holds that a program cannot give a computer a "mind" or "understanding", regardless of how intelligently it may make it behave. Stevan Harnad argues that Searle's critique is really meant to target functionalism and computationalism, and to establish neuroscience as the only correct way to understand the mind.[39]

Physicist Adam Brown has suggested constructing a type of philosophical zombie using counterfactual quantum computation, a technique in which a computer is placed into a superposition of running and not running. If the program being executed is a brain simulation, and if one makes the further assumption that brain simulations are conscious, then the simulation can have the same output as a conscious system, yet not be conscious.[40]

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Kirk, Robert (2009). "Zombie". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Summer 2009s ed.).
  2. ^ Chalmers, D. (1996): The Conscious Mind, Oxford University Press, New York.
  3. ^ Stoljar, Daniel (October 11, 2018). "The Epistemic Approach to the Mind-Body Problem. Daniel Stoljar". YouTube.
  4. ^ a b Dennett, Daniel C. (1991). Consciousness Explained. Boston, Toronto, London: Little, Brown and Co. ISBN 0-316-18065-3.
  5. ^ a b c d Dennett, Daniel C. (1995). Darwin's Dangerous Idea. New York: Simon & Schuster. p. 322. ISBN 0-684-82471-X.
  6. ^ a b Hill, Christopher (1997). "Imaginability, conceivability, possibility, and the mind-body problem". Philosophical Studies. 87 (1): 61–85. doi:10.1023/A:1017911200883. S2CID 170606123.
  7. ^ a b Chalmers, David (21 March 2019). "Zombies and the Conceivability Argument". Phil Papers.
  8. ^ Thomas, Nigel (1998). Zombie killer. MIT Press. Retrieved 15 March 2019.
  9. ^ Braddon-Mitchell, David (2003). "Qualia and analytical conditionals". Journal of Philosophy. 100 (3): 111–135. doi:10.5840/jphil2003100321.
  10. ^ Kirk, Robert (2005). Zombies and Consciousness. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199229802.
  11. ^ Balog, Katalin (1999). "Conceivability, Possibility, and the Mind-Body Problem". Philosophical Review. 108 (4): 497–528. doi:10.2307/2998286. JSTOR 2998286. S2CID 170702148.
  12. ^ Frankish, Keith (2007). "The anti-zombie argument" (PDF). Philosophical Quarterly. 57 (229): 650–666. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9213.2007.510.x.
  13. ^ Yablo, Stephen (1999). "Concepts and Consciousness". Philosophy and Phenomenological Research. 59 (2): 455–463. doi:10.2307/2653683. JSTOR 2653683.
  14. ^ Bealer, G. (2002). Gendler, Tamar; Hawthorne, John (eds.). Conceivability and Possibility.
  15. ^ Kirk, Robert (21 March 2019). "Zombies". Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  16. ^ Bourget, David; Chalmers, David. "What Do Philosophers Believe?∗". PhilPapers. Retrieved 21 March 2019.
  17. ^ Weinberg, Justin (November 1, 2021). "What Philosophers Believe: Results from the 2020 PhilPapers Survey". Retrieved March 20, 2022.
  18. ^ Hauser, Larry (2006). "Zombies, Blade Runner and the Mind-Body Problem". In Greene, Richard; Mohammad, K. Silem (eds.). The Undead and Philosophy. Open Court. p. 55. ISBN 978-0-8126-9601-1. Philosophy zombies "eat brains" by seeming to be counterexamples to every attempt to identify mental states with adaptive behavioral output. Behavioralists propose to identify mental states with adaptive behavioral output.
  19. ^ Harnad, Stevan (2000). "Minds, Machines, and Turing: The Indistinguishability of Indistinguishables". Journal of Logic, Language and Information. 9 (4): 425–445. doi:10.1023/A:1008315308862. S2CID 1911720.
  20. ^ Gutfreund, Y. (2018). "The Mind-Evolution Problem: The Difficulty of Fitting Consciousness in an Evolutionary Framework". Frontiers in Psychology. 9: 1537. doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01537. PMC 6117425. PMID 30197617.
  21. ^ Robinson, Howard. "Dualism". The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Fall 2009 Edition), Edward N. Zalta (ed.).
  22. ^ Kripke, Saul. Naming and Necessity (1972)
  23. ^ a b Chalmers, 2003, p. 5.
  24. ^ Chalmers, 2010, p. 106–109
  25. ^ Harnad, Stevan (1995). "Why and How We Are Not Zombies". Journal of Consciousness Studies. 1: 164–167.
  26. ^ Kind, A. (2020). Philosophy of mind: The basics. Routledge.
  27. ^ Strawson, Galen (1999). Hameroff, S.; Kaszniak, A.; Chalmers, D. (eds.). Towards a Science of Consciousness III.
  28. ^ Chalmers, 1996, p. 96.
  29. ^ Chalmers, 1996, pp. 67–68.
  30. ^ Dennett 1995; 1999
  31. ^ Lynch, Michael P. (2006). Zombies and the case of the phenomenal pickpocket. Synthese 149 (1):37-58.
  32. ^ Harris, Sam. "Making Sense #96". SamHarris.org. Sam Harris. Retrieved 27 August 2020. (25.45) TM:I think it will not be a mystery. Life is not a mystery anymore, but a hundred and fifty years ago many people thought that this is an irreducible mystery. (25:57) SH:So you're not a fan anymore, if you ever were, of the framing by David Chalmers of the Hard Problem of Consciousness? TM: No, that's so boring. I mean, that's last century. I mean, you know, we all respect Dave [Chalmers], and we know he is very smart and has got a very fast mind, no debate about that. But Conceivability Arguments are just very, very weak. If you have an ill-defined folk psychological umbrella term like "consciousness", then you can pull off all kinds of scenarios and zombie thought experiments. It doesn't really… It helped to clarify some issues in the mid 90's, but the consciousness community has listened to this and just moved on. I mean nobody of the serious researchers in the field thinks about this anymore, but it has taken on like a folkloristic life of its own. A lot of people talk about the Hard Problem who wouldn't be able to state what it consists in now.
  33. ^ "Edge: CONSCIOUSNESS IS A BIG SUITCASE - A Talk with Marvin Minsky [page 2]". edge.com.
  34. ^ Brown, Richard (2010). "Deprioritizing the A Priori Arguments Against Physicalism" (PDF). Journal of Consciousness Studies. 17 (3–4): 47–69.
  35. ^ Piccinini, Gualtiero (2017). Access Denied to Zombies. Topoi 36 (1):81-93.
  36. ^ Yablo, 2000, §XV.
  37. ^ a b Christopher S. Hill; Brian P. Mclaughlin (Jun 1999). "There are Fewer Things in Reality Than are Dreamt of in Chalmers's Philosophy". Philosophy and Phenomenological Research. 59 (2): 445–454. doi:10.2307/2653682. JSTOR 2653682.
  38. ^ Davidson, Donald (1987). "Knowing One's Own Mind". Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association. 60 (3): 441–458. doi:10.2307/3131782. ISSN 0065-972X. JSTOR 3131782.
  39. ^ Harnad, Stevan (2001), "What's Wrong and Right About Searle's Chinese Room Argument", in M.; Preston, J., Essays on Searle's Chinese Room Argument, Oxford University Press.
  40. ^ Musser, George. "Schrödinger's Zombie: Adam Brown at the 6th FQXi Meeting". FQXi.org. Retrieved 9 September 2019.

Bibliography edit

  • Bergson, Henri. 1911. 'Life and Consciousness', Conference given at the university of Oxford. Oxford: 1911. (https://archive.org/details/hibbertjournal10londuoft/page/32/mode/2up?view=theater)
  • Chalmers, David. 1995. "Facing Up to the Problem of Consciousness", Journal of Consciousness Studies, vol. 2, no. 3, pp. 200–219. Online PDF
  • Chalmers, David. 1996. The Conscious Mind: In Search of a Fundamental Theory, New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press. Hardcover: ISBN 0-19-511789-1, paperback: ISBN 0-19-510553-2
  • Chalmers, David. 2003. "Consciousness and its Place in Nature", in the Blackwell Guide to the Philosophy of Mind, S. Stich and F. Warfield (eds.), Blackwell. Also in Philosophy of Mind: Classical and Contemporary Readings, D. Chalmers (ed.), Oxford, 2002. ISBN 0-19-514581-X, Online PDF
  • Chalmers, David. 2004. "Imagination, Indexicality, and Intensions", Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, vol. 68, no. 1. Online text doi:10.1111/j.1933-1592.2004.tb00334.x
  • Chalmers, David. 2010. "the character of consciousness", OUP
  • Dennett, Daniel. 1995. "The Unimagined Preposterousness of Zombies", Journal of Consciousness Studies, vol. 2, no. 4, pp. 322–326. Online abstract
  • Dennett, Daniel. 1999. "The Zombic Hunch: Extinction of an Intuition?", Royal Institute of Philosophy Millennial Lecture. Online text
  • Kirk, Robert. 1974. "Sentience and Behaviour", Mind, vol. 83, pp. 43–60. JSTOR 2252795
  • Kripke, Saul. 1972. "Naming and Necessity", in Semantics of Natural Language, ed. by D. Davidson and G. Harman, Dordrecht, Holland: Reidel, pp. 253–355. (Published as a book in 1980, Harvard University Press.)
  • Nagel, Thomas. 1970. "Armstrong on the Mind", Philosophical Review, vol. 79, pp. 394–403. JSTOR 2183935
  • Nagel, Thomas. 1974. "What Is it Like to Be a Bat?" Philosophical Review, vol. 83, pp. 435–450. JSTOR 2183914
  • Thomas, N.J.T. 1998. "Zombie Killer", in S.R. Hameroff, A.W. Kaszniak, & A.C. Scott (eds.), Toward a Science of Consciousness II: The Second Tucson Discussions and Debates (pp. 171–177), Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. Online
  • Yablo, Stephen. 2000. "Textbook Kripkeanism and the Open Texture of Concepts", Pacific Philosophical Quarterly, vol. 81, pp. 98–122. Online text doi:10.1111/1468-0114.00097

External links edit

  • Online papers on philosophical zombies, by various authors, compiled by David Chalmers.
  • Field Guide to the Philosophy of Mind 2006-12-05 at the Wayback Machine
  • Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). "Zombies". Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  • Skepdic entry on p-zombies
  • A Chaospet comic on the subject of philosophical zombies
  • On The Conceivability of Zombies Paper argues that Philosophical Zombies are not conceivable

philosophical, zombie, other, uses, zombie, disambiguation, philosophical, zombie, zombie, being, thought, experiment, philosophy, mind, that, physically, identical, normal, person, does, have, conscious, experience, example, philosophical, zombie, were, poked. For other uses see Zombie disambiguation A philosophical zombie or p zombie is a being in a thought experiment in philosophy of mind that is physically identical to a normal person but does not have conscious experience 1 For example if a philosophical zombie were poked with a sharp object it would not feel any pain but it would behave exactly the way any conscious human would Philosophical zombie arguments are used against forms of physicalism and in defense of the hard problem of consciousness which is the problem of accounting in physical terms for subjective intrinsic first person what it s like ness experiences Proponents of philosophical zombie arguments such as the philosopher David Chalmers argue that since a philosophical zombie is by definition physically identical to a conscious person even its logical possibility refutes physicalism because it establishes the existence of conscious experience as a further fact 2 Philosopher Daniel Stoljar points out that zombies need not be utterly without subjective states that even a subtle psychological difference between two physically identical people such as in the taste of coffee is enough to refute physicalism 3 Such arguments have been criticized by many philosophers Some physicalists such as Daniel Dennett argue that philosophical zombies are logically incoherent and thus impossible or that all humans are philosophical zombies 4 5 others such as Christopher Hill argue that philosophical zombies are coherent but metaphysically impossible 6 Contents 1 History 2 Types of zombies 3 Zombie arguments 4 Responses 5 Related thought experiments 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Notes 7 2 Bibliography 8 External linksHistory editPhilosophical zombies are associated with David Chalmers but it was philosopher Robert Kirk who first used the term zombie in this context in 1974 Before that Keith Campbell made a similar argument in his 1970 book Body and Mind using the term Imitation Man 7 Chalmers further developed and popularized the idea in his work There has been a lively debate about what the zombie argument shows 7 Critics who primarily argue that zombies are not conceivable include Daniel Dennett Nigel J T Thomas 8 David Braddon Mitchell 9 and Robert Kirk 10 critics who assert mostly that conceivability does not entail possibility include Katalin Balog 11 Keith Frankish 12 Christopher Hill 6 and Stephen Yablo 13 and critics who question the logical validity of the argument include George Bealer 14 In his 2019 update to the article on philosophical zombies in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Kirk summed up the current state of the debate In spite of the fact that the arguments on both sides have become increasingly sophisticated or perhaps because of it they have not become more persuasive The pull in each direction remains strong 15 A 2013 survey of professional philosophers by Bourget and Chalmers found that 36 said P Zombies were conceivable but metaphysically impossible 23 said they were metaphysically possible 16 said they were inconceivable and 25 responded other 16 In 2020 the same survey yielded almost identical results inconceivable 16 conceivable but impossible 37 metaphysically possible 24 and other 23 17 Types of zombies editThough philosophical zombies are widely used in thought experiments the detailed articulation of the concept is not always the same P zombies were introduced primarily to argue against specific types of physicalism such as materialism and behaviorism according to which mental states exist solely as behavior Belief desire thought consciousness and so on are only behavior whether external behavior or internal behavior or tendencies towards behaviors A p zombie behaviorally indistinguishable from a normal human being but lacking conscious experiences is therefore not logically possible according to the behaviorist 18 so an appeal to the logical possibility of a p zombie furnishes an argument that behaviorism is false Proponents of zombie arguments generally accept that p zombies are not physically possible while opponents necessarily deny that they are metaphysically or in some cases even logically possible The unifying idea of the zombie is that of a human completely lacking conscious experience It is possible to distinguish various zombie subtypes used in different thought experiments as follows A behavioral zombie is behaviorally indistinguishable from a human A neurological zombie has a human brain and is generally physiologically indistinguishable from a human 19 A soulless zombie lacks a soul An imperfect zombie or imp zombie is like a p zombie but has slightly different behavior than a regular human They are important in the context of the mind evolution problem 20 A zombie universe is identical to our world in all physical ways except no being in it has qualia Zombie arguments editZombie arguments often support lines of reasoning that aim to show that zombies are metaphysically possible in order to support some form of dualism in this case the view that the world includes two kinds of substance or perhaps two kinds of property the mental and the physical 21 In contrast to dualism in physicalism material facts determine all other facts Since any fact other than that of consciousness may be held to be the same for a p zombie and for a normal conscious human it follows that physicalism must hold that p zombies are either not possible or are the same as normal humans The zombie argument is a version of general modal arguments against physicalism such as that of Saul Kripke 22 page needed Further such arguments were notably advanced in the 1970s by Thomas Nagel 1970 1974 and Robert Kirk 1974 but the general argument was most famously developed in detail by David Chalmers in The Conscious Mind 1996 According to Chalmers one can coherently conceive of an entire zombie world a world physically indistinguishable from this one but entirely lacking conscious experience Since such a world is conceivable Chalmers claims it is metaphysically possible which is all the argument requires Chalmers writes Zombies are probably not naturally possible they probably cannot exist in our world with its laws of nature 23 The outline structure of Chalmers s version of the zombie argument is as follows According to physicalism all that exists in our world including consciousness is physical Thus if physicalism is true a metaphysically possible world in which all physical facts are the same as those of the actual world must contain everything that exists in our actual world In particular conscious experience must exist in such a possible world Chalmers argues that we can conceive of a world physically indistinguishable from our world but in which there is no consciousness a zombie world From this Chalmers argues it follows that such a world is metaphysically possible Therefore physicalism is false The conclusion follows from 2 and 3 by modus tollens The above is a strong formulation of the zombie argument There are other formulations of zombie type arguments that follow the same general form The premises of the general zombie argument are implied by the premises of all the specific zombie arguments A general zombie argument is in part motivated by potential disagreements between various anti physicalist views For example an anti physicalist view can consistently assert that p zombies are metaphysically impossible but that inverted qualia such as inverted spectra or absent qualia partial zombiehood are metaphysically possible Premises regarding inverted qualia or partial zombiehood can replace premises regarding p zombies to produce variations of the zombie argument The metaphysical possibility of a physically indistinguishable world with either inverted qualia or partial zombiehood implies that physical truths do not metaphysically necessitate phenomenal truths To formulate the general form of the zombie argument take the sentence P to be true if and only if the conjunct of all microphysical truths of our world obtain and take the sentence Q to be true if some phenomenal truth that obtains in the actual world obtains The general argument goes as follows It is conceivable that P is true and Q is not true If it is conceivable that P is true and Q is not true then it is metaphysically possible that P is true and Q not true If it is metaphysically possible that P is true and Q is not true then physicalism is false Therefore physicalism is false 24 Q can be false in a possible world if any of the following obtains 1 there exists at least one invert relative to the actual world 2 there is at least one absent quale relative to the actual world 3 all actually conscious beings are p zombies all actual qualia are absent qualia Another way to construe the zombie hypothesis is epistemically as a problem of causal explanation rather than as a problem of logical or metaphysical possibility The explanatory gap also called the hard problem of consciousness is the claim that to date no one has provided a convincing causal explanation of how and why we are conscious It is a manifestation of the very same gap that to date no one has provided a convincing causal explanation of how and why we are not zombies 25 The philosophical zombie argument can also be seen through the counterfeit bill example brought forth by Amy Kind Kind s example centers around a counterfeit 20 dollar bill made to be exactly like an authentic 20 dollar bill This is logically possible And yet the counterfeit bill would not have the same value Are people really conceiving of zombies when they say they are When philosophers claim that zombies are conceivable they invariably underestimate the task of conception and end up imagining something that violates their own definition According to Kind in her book Philosophy of Mind the basics The Zombie Argument can be put in this standard form from a dualist point of view Zombies creatures that are microphysically identical to conscious beings but that lack consciousness entirely are conceivable If zombies are conceivable then they are possible Therefore zombies are possible If zombies are possible then consciousness is non physical Therefore consciousness is non physical 26 Responses editGalen Strawson argues that it is not possible to establish the conceivability of zombies so the argument lacking its first premise can never get going 27 Chalmers has argued that zombies are conceivable saying it certainly seems that a coherent situation is described I can discern no contradiction in the description 28 Many physicalist philosophers who have argued that this scenario eliminates itself by its description the basis of a physicalist argument is that the world is defined entirely by physicality thus a world that was physically identical would necessarily contain consciousness as consciousness would necessarily be generated from any set of physical circumstances identical to our own The zombie argument claims that one can tell by the power of reason that such a zombie scenario is metaphysically possible Chalmers writes From the conceivability of zombies proponents of the argument infer their metaphysical possibility 23 and argues that this inference while not generally legitimate is legitimate for phenomenal concepts such as consciousness since we must adhere to Kripke s insight that for phenomenal concepts there is no gap between reference fixers and reference or between primary and secondary intentions That is for phenomenal concepts conceivability implies possibility According to Chalmers whatever is logically possible is also in the sense relevant here metaphysically possible 29 Another response is the denial of the idea that qualia and related phenomenal notions of the mind are in the first place coherent concepts Daniel Dennett and others argue that while consciousness and subjective experience exist in some sense they are not as the zombie argument proponent claims The experience of pain for example is not something that can be stripped off a person s mental life without bringing about any behavioral or physiological differences Dennett believes that consciousness is a complex series of functions and ideas If we all can have these experiences the idea of the p zombie is meaningless Dennett argues that when philosophers claim that zombies are conceivable they invariably underestimate the task of conception or imagination and end up imagining something that violates their own definition 4 5 He coined the term zimboes p zombies that have second order beliefs to argue that the idea of a p zombie is incoherent 30 Zimboes thinkZ they are conscious thinkZ they have qualia thinkZ they suffer pains they are just wrong according to this lamentable tradition in ways that neither they nor we could ever discover 5 Michael Lynch agrees with Dennett arguing that the zombie conceivability argument forces us to either question whether we actually have consciousness or accept that zombies are not possible If zombies falsely believe they are conscious how can we be sure we are not zombies We may believe we are experiencing conscious mental states when in fact we merely hold a false belief Lynch thinks denying the possibility of zombies is more reasonable than questioning our own consciousness 31 Furthermore when concept of self is deemed to correspond to physical reality alone reductive physicalism philosophical zombies are denied by definition When a distinction is made in one s mind between a hypothetical zombie and oneself assumed not to be a zombie the hypothetical zombie being a subset of the concept of oneself must entail a deficit in observables cognitive systems a seductive error 5 contradicting the original definition of a zombie Thomas Metzinger dismisses the argument as no longer relevant to the consciousness community calling it a weak argument that covertly relies on the difficulty in defining consciousness and an ill defined folk psychological umbrella term 32 Verificationism 1 states that for words to have meaning their use must be open to public verification Since it is assumed that we can talk about our qualia the existence of zombies is impossible Artificial intelligence researcher Marvin Minsky saw the argument as circular The proposition of the possibility of something physically identical to a human but without subjective experience assumes that the physical characteristics of humans are not what produces those experiences which is exactly what the argument claims to prove 33 Richard Brown agrees that the zombie argument is circular To show this he proposes zoombies which are creatures nonphysically identical to people in every way and lacking phenomenal consciousness If zoombies existed they would refute dualism because they would show that consciousness is not nonphysical i e is physical Paralleling the argument from Chalmers It is conceivable that zoombies exist so it is possible they exist so dualism is false Given the symmetry between the zombie and zoombie arguments we cannot arbitrate the physicalism dualism question a priori 34 Similarly Gualtiero Piccinini argues that the zombie conceivability argument is circular Piccinini questions whether the possible worlds where zombies exist are accessible from our world If physicalism is true in our world then physicalism is one of the relevant facts about our world for determining whether a possible zombie world is accessible from our world Therefore asking whether zombies are metaphysically possible in our world is equivalent to asking whether physicalism is true in our world 35 Stephen Yablo s 1998 response is to provide an error theory to account for the intuition that zombies are possible Notions of what counts as physical and as physically possible change over time so conceptual analysis is not reliable here Yablo says he is braced for the information that is going to make zombies inconceivable even though I have no real idea what form the information is going to take 36 The zombie argument is difficult to assess because it brings to light fundamental disagreements about the method and scope of philosophy itself and the nature and abilities of conceptual analysis Proponents of the zombie argument may think that conceptual analysis is a central part of if not the only part of philosophy and that it certainly can do a great deal of philosophical work But others such as Dennett Paul Churchland and W V O Quine have fundamentally different views For this reason discussion of the zombie argument remains vigorous in philosophy Some accept modal reasoning in general but deny it in the zombie case Christopher S Hill and Brian P Mclaughlin suggest that the zombie thought experiment combines imagination of a sympathetic nature putting oneself in a phenomenal state and a perceptual nature imagining becoming aware of something in the outside world Each type of imagination may work on its own but not work when used at the same time Hence Chalmers s argument need not go through 37 448 Moreover while Chalmers defuses criticisms of the view that conceivability can tell us about possibility he provides no positive defense of the principle As an analogy the generalized continuum hypothesis has no known counterexamples but this does not mean we must accept it And indeed the fact that Chalmers concludes we have epiphenomenal mental states that do not cause our physical behavior seems one reason to reject his principle 37 449 51 Related thought experiments editFrank Jackson s Knowledge argument is based around a hypothetical scientist Mary who is forced to view the world through a black and white television screen in a black and white room Mary is a brilliant scientist who knows everything about the neurobiology of vision Even though she knows everything about color and its perception e g what combination of wavelengths makes the sky seem blue she has never seen color If Mary were released from this room and experienced color for the first time would she learn anything new Jackson initially believed this supported epiphenomenalism mental phenomena are the effects but not the causes of physical phenomena but later changed his view to physicalism suggesting that Mary is simply discovering a new way for her brain to represent qualities that exist in the world Swampman is an imaginary character introduced by Donald Davidson If Davidson goes hiking in a swamp and is struck and killed by a lightning bolt while nearby another lightning bolt spontaneously rearranges a bunch of molecules so that entirely by coincidence they take on exactly the same form that Davidson s body had at the moment of his untimely death then this being Swampman has a brain structurally identical to Davidson s and will thus presumably behave exactly like Davidson He will return to Davidson s office and write the same essays he would have written recognize all of his friends and family and so forth 38 John Searle s Chinese room argument deals with the nature of artificial intelligence it imagines a room in which a conversation is held by means of written Chinese characters that the subject cannot actually read but is able to manipulate meaningfully using a set of algorithms Searle holds that a program cannot give a computer a mind or understanding regardless of how intelligently it may make it behave Stevan Harnad argues that Searle s critique is really meant to target functionalism and computationalism and to establish neuroscience as the only correct way to understand the mind 39 Physicist Adam Brown has suggested constructing a type of philosophical zombie using counterfactual quantum computation a technique in which a computer is placed into a superposition of running and not running If the program being executed is a brain simulation and if one makes the further assumption that brain simulations are conscious then the simulation can have the same output as a conscious system yet not be conscious 40 See also edit nbsp Philosophy portalBegging the question Logic founded on unproven premises Blindsight Visual response in some blind people Causality How one process influences another Double aspect theory Theory in the philosophy of mind Ethics of uncertain sentience Map territory relation Mind body problem Neutral monism NPC meme No true Scotsman Problem of other minds Quantum Night Reverse engineering Sentience Ship of Theseus Solipsism Turing test Test of a machine s ability to imitate human intelligence Vertiginous question Philosophical argument by Benj HellieReferences editNotes edit a b Kirk Robert 2009 Zombie In Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Summer 2009s ed Chalmers D 1996 The Conscious Mind Oxford University Press New York Stoljar Daniel October 11 2018 The Epistemic Approach to the Mind Body Problem Daniel Stoljar YouTube a b Dennett Daniel C 1991 Consciousness Explained Boston Toronto London Little Brown and Co ISBN 0 316 18065 3 a b c d Dennett Daniel C 1995 Darwin s Dangerous Idea New York Simon amp Schuster p 322 ISBN 0 684 82471 X a b Hill Christopher 1997 Imaginability conceivability possibility and the mind body problem Philosophical Studies 87 1 61 85 doi 10 1023 A 1017911200883 S2CID 170606123 a b Chalmers David 21 March 2019 Zombies and the Conceivability Argument Phil Papers Thomas Nigel 1998 Zombie killer MIT Press Retrieved 15 March 2019 Braddon Mitchell David 2003 Qualia and analytical conditionals Journal of Philosophy 100 3 111 135 doi 10 5840 jphil2003100321 Kirk Robert 2005 Zombies and Consciousness Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199229802 Balog Katalin 1999 Conceivability Possibility and the Mind Body Problem Philosophical Review 108 4 497 528 doi 10 2307 2998286 JSTOR 2998286 S2CID 170702148 Frankish Keith 2007 The anti zombie argument PDF Philosophical Quarterly 57 229 650 666 doi 10 1111 j 1467 9213 2007 510 x Yablo Stephen 1999 Concepts and Consciousness Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 59 2 455 463 doi 10 2307 2653683 JSTOR 2653683 Bealer G 2002 Gendler Tamar Hawthorne John eds Conceivability and Possibility Kirk Robert 21 March 2019 Zombies Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Bourget David Chalmers David What Do Philosophers Believe PhilPapers Retrieved 21 March 2019 Weinberg Justin November 1 2021 What Philosophers Believe Results from the 2020 PhilPapers Survey Retrieved March 20 2022 Hauser Larry 2006 Zombies Blade Runner and the Mind Body Problem In Greene Richard Mohammad K Silem eds The Undead and Philosophy Open Court p 55 ISBN 978 0 8126 9601 1 Philosophy zombies eat brains by seeming to be counterexamples to every attempt to identify mental states with adaptive behavioral output Behavioralists propose to identify mental states with adaptive behavioral output Harnad Stevan 2000 Minds Machines and Turing The Indistinguishability of Indistinguishables Journal of Logic Language and Information 9 4 425 445 doi 10 1023 A 1008315308862 S2CID 1911720 Gutfreund Y 2018 The Mind Evolution Problem The Difficulty of Fitting Consciousness in an Evolutionary Framework Frontiers in Psychology 9 1537 doi 10 3389 fpsyg 2018 01537 PMC 6117425 PMID 30197617 Robinson Howard Dualism The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Fall 2009 Edition Edward N Zalta ed Kripke Saul Naming and Necessity 1972 a b Chalmers 2003 p 5 Chalmers 2010 p 106 109 Harnad Stevan 1995 Why and How We Are Not Zombies Journal of Consciousness Studies 1 164 167 Kind A 2020 Philosophy of mind The basics Routledge Strawson Galen 1999 Hameroff S Kaszniak A Chalmers D eds Towards a Science of Consciousness III Chalmers 1996 p 96 Chalmers 1996 pp 67 68 Dennett 1995 1999 Lynch Michael P 2006 Zombies and the case of the phenomenal pickpocket Synthese 149 1 37 58 Harris Sam Making Sense 96 SamHarris org Sam Harris Retrieved 27 August 2020 25 45 TM I think it will not be a mystery Life is not a mystery anymore but a hundred and fifty years ago many people thought that this is an irreducible mystery 25 57 SH So you re not a fan anymore if you ever were of the framing by David Chalmers of the Hard Problem of Consciousness TM No that s so boring I mean that s last century I mean you know we all respect Dave Chalmers and we know he is very smart and has got a very fast mind no debate about that But Conceivability Arguments are just very very weak If you have an ill defined folk psychological umbrella term like consciousness then you can pull off all kinds of scenarios and zombie thought experiments It doesn t really It helped to clarify some issues in the mid 90 s but the consciousness community has listened to this and just moved on I mean nobody of the serious researchers in the field thinks about this anymore but it has taken on like a folkloristic life of its own A lot of people talk about the Hard Problem who wouldn t be able to state what it consists in now Edge CONSCIOUSNESS IS A BIG SUITCASE A Talk with Marvin Minsky page 2 edge com Brown Richard 2010 Deprioritizing the A Priori Arguments Against Physicalism PDF Journal of Consciousness Studies 17 3 4 47 69 Piccinini Gualtiero 2017 Access Denied to Zombies Topoi 36 1 81 93 Yablo 2000 XV a b Christopher S Hill Brian P Mclaughlin Jun 1999 There are Fewer Things in Reality Than are Dreamt of in Chalmers s Philosophy Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 59 2 445 454 doi 10 2307 2653682 JSTOR 2653682 Davidson Donald 1987 Knowing One s Own Mind Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 60 3 441 458 doi 10 2307 3131782 ISSN 0065 972X JSTOR 3131782 Harnad Stevan 2001 What s Wrong and Right About Searle s Chinese Room Argument in M Preston J Essays on Searle s Chinese Room Argument Oxford University Press Musser George Schrodinger s Zombie Adam Brown at the 6th FQXi Meeting FQXi org Retrieved 9 September 2019 Bibliography edit Bergson Henri 1911 Life and Consciousness Conference given at the university of Oxford Oxford 1911 https archive org details hibbertjournal10londuoft page 32 mode 2up view theater Chalmers David 1995 Facing Up to the Problem of Consciousness Journal of Consciousness Studies vol 2 no 3 pp 200 219 Online PDF Chalmers David 1996 The Conscious Mind In Search of a Fundamental Theory New York and Oxford Oxford University Press Hardcover ISBN 0 19 511789 1 paperback ISBN 0 19 510553 2 Chalmers David 2003 Consciousness and its Place in Nature in the Blackwell Guide to the Philosophy of Mind S Stich and F Warfield eds Blackwell Also in Philosophy of Mind Classical and Contemporary Readings D Chalmers ed Oxford 2002 ISBN 0 19 514581 X Online PDF Chalmers David 2004 Imagination Indexicality and Intensions Philosophy and Phenomenological Research vol 68 no 1 Online text doi 10 1111 j 1933 1592 2004 tb00334 x Chalmers David 2010 the character of consciousness OUP Dennett Daniel 1995 The Unimagined Preposterousness of Zombies Journal of Consciousness Studies vol 2 no 4 pp 322 326 Online abstract Dennett Daniel 1999 The Zombic Hunch Extinction of an Intuition Royal Institute of Philosophy Millennial Lecture Online text Kirk Robert 1974 Sentience and Behaviour Mind vol 83 pp 43 60 JSTOR 2252795 Kripke Saul 1972 Naming and Necessity in Semantics of Natural Language ed by D Davidson and G Harman Dordrecht Holland Reidel pp 253 355 Published as a book in 1980 Harvard University Press Nagel Thomas 1970 Armstrong on the Mind Philosophical Review vol 79 pp 394 403 JSTOR 2183935 Nagel Thomas 1974 What Is it Like to Be a Bat Philosophical Review vol 83 pp 435 450 JSTOR 2183914 Thomas N J T 1998 Zombie Killer in S R Hameroff A W Kaszniak amp A C Scott eds Toward a Science of Consciousness II The Second Tucson Discussions and Debates pp 171 177 Cambridge MA MIT Press Online Yablo Stephen 2000 Textbook Kripkeanism and the Open Texture of Concepts Pacific Philosophical Quarterly vol 81 pp 98 122 Online text doi 10 1111 1468 0114 00097External links editOnline papers on philosophical zombies by various authors compiled by David Chalmers Field Guide to the Philosophy of Mind Archived 2006 12 05 at the Wayback Machine Zalta Edward N ed Zombies Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Skepdic entry on p zombies A Chaospet comic on the subject of philosophical zombies On The Conceivability of Zombies Paper argues that Philosophical Zombies are not conceivable Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Philosophical zombie amp oldid 1189425312, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.