Back to Search Start Over

What We Can Learn From Literary Authors.

Authors :
Voltolini, Alberto
Source :
Acta Analytica. Dec2021, Vol. 36 Issue 4, p479-499. 21p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

That we can learn something from literature, as cognitivists claim, seems to be a commonplace. However, when one considers matters more deeply, it turns out to be a problematic claim. In this paper, by focusing on general revelatory facts about the world and the human spirit, I hold that the cognitivist claim can be vindicated if one takes it as follows. We do not learn such facts from literature, if by "literature" one means the truth-conditional contents that one may ascribe to textual sentences in their fictional use, i.e., in the use in which one makes believe that things unfold in a certain way. What we improperly call learning from literature amounts to knowing actually true conversational implicatures concerning the above facts as meant by literary authors. So, in one and the same shot, we learn both a general revelatory fact and the fact that such a fact is meant via a true conversational implicature by an author. The author draws that implicature from the different truth-conditional content a sentence possesses when the sentence is interpreted in a fictional context, meant as Kaplan's (1989) narrow context, i.e., a set of circumstantial parameters (agent, space, time, and world). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Subjects

Subjects :
*AUTHORS

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03535150
Volume :
36
Issue :
4
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Acta Analytica
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
153123427
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12136-021-00467-z