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Ficción y compromiso ontológico

  • Autores: Eleonora Orlando
  • Localización: Quaderns de filosofia, ISSN 2341-1414, Vol. 1, Nº. 1, 2014, págs. 39-54
  • Idioma: español
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  • Resumen
    • In this paper I am concerned with a variant of Kripke´s abstractist theory of fiction, namely, the semantic theory according to which proper names and natural class general terms in the discourse of fiction refer to some kind of abstract entities. As emphasized by Kripke himself, those entities are not to be conceived either in terms of nonexistent but concrete ones, along the lines of neo-Meinongians, or as merely possible ones, following Lewis� suggestions: in the version I will be defending they are literary or mythological characters, a sui generis kind of abstract entities, namely, ones that are originated by means of acts of creative writing or storytelling �hence, also some kind of artifacts�. First, I make some clarifications concerning the application of direct reference to fictional terms. Then, I focus on two main problems that arise in relation to a position like the present one: the first one is accounting for the intuitive truth of typically fictive uses, such as �Ulysses is sleeping on the beach of Ithaca�, given that a literary character like Ulysses cannot literally and strictly have the property of being asleep. The second one is accounting for some problematic metafictive uses, in particular, the use of intuitively true negative existentials, such as �Ulysses does not exist�, which on this account come out false, since �Ulysses� refers to an existent literary character.


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