Fiction and Thought Experiment - A Case Study

Teorema: International Journal of Philosophy 35 (3):185-199 (2016)
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Abstract

Many philosophers are very sanguine about the cognitive contributions of fiction to science and philosophy. I focus on a case study: Ichikawa and Jarvis’s account of thought experiments in terms of everyday fictional stories. As far as the contribution of fiction is not sui generis, processing fiction often will be parasitic on cognitive capacities which may replace it; as far as it is sui generis, nothing guarantees that fiction is sufficiently well-behaved to abide by the constraints of scientific and philosophical discourse, not even by the minimum requirements of conceptual and logical coherence.

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Daniel Dohrn
Università degli Studi di Milano

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Truth in fiction.David K. Lewis - 1978 - American Philosophical Quarterly 15 (1):37–46.
Mimesis as Make-Believe.Kendall Walton - 1996 - Synthese 109 (3):413-434.
Mimesis as Make-Believe: On the Foundations of the Representational Arts.Kendall L. Walton - 1990 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 49 (2):161-166.
Narrative explanation.J. David Velleman - 2003 - Philosophical Review 112 (1):1-25.

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