Resisting the Habit of Tlön: Whitehead, Borges, and the Fictional Nature of Concepts

Philosophy and Literature 42 (1):81-96 (2018)
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Abstract

Our interpretations of experience determine the limits of what we can do with the world.Jorge Luis Borges's short stories act as narrative experiments with the potential to alter the reader's experience. They provide momentary glimpses into a remixed reality that, through their vivacity, allow us to wonder at the immanent possibilities that emerge when we acknowledge the irreality of language. This function of Borges's writing follows from his understanding of fictions as imaginative verbal constructions that are effective due to their aesthetic quality, the capacity to evoke emotional responses through play with narrative form. Borges does not write to produce truths. He is doubtful of the ability of any given...

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Michael L. Thomas
University of Chicago

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