Patchwork Puzzles and the Nature of Fiction
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2019Publisher
Univerzita Karlova, Filozofická fakultaSource document
Estetika: The Central European Journal of Aesthetics (web)ISSN: 2571-0915
Periodical publication year: 2019
Periodical Volume: 2019
Periodical Issue: 1
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fiction, fictional world, worlds of fiction, aesthetic experience, Currie G.Kathleen Stock has recently argued that Gregory Currie’s account of fiction is beset by two
patchwork puzzles. According to the first, Currie’s account entails that works of fiction end
up being implausible heterogenous complexes of utterances that furnish a fictional world
and utterances that aim at representing the actual world. According to the second,
competent engagement with a fiction can implausibly result in switching from one mental
attitude to another – namely, belief and make-belief. In this paper, I argue for two main
claims. First, that a few alterations to Currie’s account make it immune to Stock’s puzzles.
And, second, that such a modified account presents clear advantages over the alternative
one offered by Stock.