Results 11 to 20 of about 2,920 (151)
Fictional Names without Fictional Objects
In this paper, I criticize Mark Sainsbury’s proposal concerning the semantic analysis of fictional discourse, as it has been put forward in chapter 6 of his Reference without Referents.
Eleonora Orlando
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Fictional Reports A Study on the Semantics of Fictional Names
Against standard descriptivist and referentialist semantics for fictional reports, I will defend a view according to which fictional names do not refer yet they can be distinguished from one another by virtue of their different name-using practices. The
Fiora Salis
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Fictional Characters and Their Names
DOI: https://doi.org/10.26333/sts.xxxvi1.02 Fictional characters do not really exist. Names of fictional characters refer to fictional characters. We should divorce the idea of reference from that of existence (the picture of the name as a tag has ...
Hanoch Ben-Yami
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Proper Names as Demonstratives in Fiction
DOI: https://doi.org/10.26333/sts.xxxvi1.05 In this article, I argue for two theses. The first is that, among different existing accounts of proper name semantics, indexicalism—a stance that treats proper names as indexical expressions—is best suited
Maciej Tarnowski
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Unravelling Names of Fictional Characters [PDF]
In this paper we explore the correlation between the sound of words and their meaning, by testing if the polarity (‘good guy’ or ‘bad guy’) of a character’s role in a work of fiction can be predicted by the name of the character in the absence of any other context. Our approach is based on phonological and other features pro- posed in prior theoretical
Katerina Papantoniou +1 more
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Ordinary Referring Names in Fictional Contexts
Ordinary proper names can be taken to be referring expressions in non-fictional contexts. But what happens when such names occur in literary works? Within the realist stance, there are two approaches to the issue.
Zoltán Vecsey
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Mental Files and the Theory of Fiction: A Reply to Zoltán Vecsey
In this work I reply to Zoltán Vecsey’s criticisms of the semantic account of fictional names I put forward in Orlando (2017). The main tenet of that proposal is that fictional names refer to individual concepts, which I understand in terms of mental ...
Eleonora Orlando
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For many of us, some of our earliest and fondest memories involve story-time, when we discovered tales that had the power to inspire, calm, or chill the spirit. Over the years, the exact details of those stories may fade from our memories.
I. M. Nick
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Co‐Identification and Fictional Names [PDF]
Stacie Friend raises a problem of “co‐identification” involving fictional names such as ‘Hamlet’ or ‘Odysseus’: how to explain judgments that different uses of these names are “about the same object”, on the assumption of irrealism about fictional characters on which such expressions do not refer.
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MENTAL FILES AND METAFICTIVE UTTERANCES [PDF]
Metafictive utterances raise a kind of intuitions (intuitions of truthfulness) that pose a problem for a view that combines a referentialist approach to proper names with an antirealist stance on fictional characters. In this article I attempt to provide
Nicolás Lo Guercio
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