I assume what I sometimes get from fiction is similar to what you get from music you love. Maybe you wouldn't call that learning something new either, and I think I'd agree. — T Clark
Do you "learn anything new" from your life experiences in general? Sure, but it's not usually knowledge that can be expressed in propositions. — T Clark
I am conscious that my awareness is constantly being shaped by things I am exposed to (music, life, books) but I don't know what this amounts to. Not sure that it relates to truth in any form I recognize. — Tom Storm
Actually, I'm not making claims, I'm posing questions based on how I recall my experiences. You'll note I didn't say fiction does not teach us anything, I said I can't think of anything fiction has taught me. — Tom Storm
Not sure I was making an objection. I was asking a question. I am wondering what kinds of truth fiction holds. I am still unclear. — Tom Storm
Great lengths? Good heavens, I thought we were just having a conversation about one small aspect of how fiction works on the back of 'philosophy being fiction.' — Tom Storm
I still don't know how to differentiate fiction from philosophy — god must be atheist
It strikes me as a hyper-empiricist epistemological system where only through either direct observation or through a closely regulated non-fictional literalism (where only basic facts are shared) can knowledge be gained. The suggestion that there is this bright line between fiction and non-fiction really doesn't hold true, because the line between fiction and non-fiction grows more blurred the more interpretive or explanatory it becomes. — Hanover
As in my To Kill a Mockingbird example, it holds the truth of the destructiveness of racism. Does it not? We speak in hypotheticals all the time in order to make a point, none of which are actually true. Such is the substance of all thought experiments. — Hanover
I might regret those words, since ↪Janus
wants me to explain truth to him yet again. :roll:
. — Banno
.One hopes that one returns to the same question in a different way.
...explain, per the physicalist view that we are affected by, and know, an external (in the sense of external to our bodies) world of meaningless micro-physical events, how it is that those phenomenologically imperceptible impingements on the body-brain give rise to a semantic representation of "a world" that is understood in logical propositional terms. — Janus
This may well be the case. Just looking for a good account of fiction as a repository of 'truth'. Throughout this I've been mulling over that Camus' quote about fiction being the lie through which we tell the truth. — Tom Storm
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