Fiction, Counterfactuals and Truth

Grazer Philosophische Studien 45 (1):117-123 (1993)
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Abstract

An account of the evaluation of fictional discourse in terms of counterfactuals is sketched which accommodates the insights of D. Lewis and G. Evans but is not committed to the existence of possibilia on the one hand and to taking counterfactuals as barely true on the other hand. By adopting a two-step theory of evaluation which does not evaluate expressions (sentences) across possible worlds modal realism is avoided. And the use of a modified incorporation principle saying that every singular reference made in the scope of a pretence is anaphoric and linked to a quantifier outside the scope allows to incorporate actual individuals within a game of make-believe.

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Jérôme Dokic
Institut Jean Nicod
Eros Corazza
University of the Basque Country

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