Abstract
This chapter sketches what is considered the best interpretation of
physicalism, rehearses the best way of defending it, and shows that the
physicalism forthcoming is still going to be less than fully satisfying; it is
going to leave us short of the satisfaction that might be expected from
a philosophical theory. The chapter is organized into three sections. The
first section gives an interpretation of physicalism in the spirit of Frank
Jackson's; this involves a rich version under which the way things are
phenomenally is derivable in principle from physical premisses. The second
sketches a representationalist or intentionalist argument for physicalism
about phenomenal experience, one which also appeals to Jackson. The third
section argues that even if we accept this case for a rich physicalism, still we
should not expect to find the doctrine fully satisfying; the simulatory gap will
stand between us and a sort of satisfaction that we might have expected to
achieve.