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Truth and Reference in the Making of Fiction

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Truth and Reference in the Making of Fiction Synopsis

A standard feature of our engagement with fictions is that we praise them as if they offer true insights on factual, psychological or evaluative matters, or criticize them as if they purport to do it but fail. But it is not so easy to make sense of this practice, since fictions traffick in made-up narratives concerning non-existing characters. This book offers the reader conceptual tools to reflect on such issues, providing an overarching, systematic account of philosophical issues concerning fictions and illustrating them with analysis of compelling examples. It asks whether fiction is defined - as John Searle and others have claimed - by mere pretense - the simulation of ordinary representational practices like assertions or requests - or whether it is defined by invitations or prescriptions to imagine. And it advances an original proposal on the nature of fictions, explaining why fictions can refer to the world and state facts about it.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9781009298452
Publication date:
Author: Manuel GarcíaCarpintero
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Format: Hardback
Pagination: 204 pages
Series: Cambridge Studies in Philosophy
Genres: Philosophy of language
Philosophy of mind
Literary theory
Linguistics
Fiction