One enduring question in philosophy is the metaphysical issue of whether reality fundamentally consists of physical facts only, generally the view of physicalism, or of some non-physical facts as well, generally the view of non-physicalism. Given that plausible candidates of such non-physical facts are the so-called phenomenal facts, referring to the facts of our conscious experiences, the question has been raised, specifically in the philosophy of mind, in terms of whether phenomenal facts are physical as well. Accordingly, physicalists claim that they are while non-physicalists claim otherwise. Now one celebrated argument against physicalism is Frank Jackson’s knowledge argument, which demonstrates, through a powerful thought experiment, ...