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Can the Tale Be Told?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 January 2020
Extract
The distinctive feature of Professor Purtill's interesting, though somewhat promissory, paper, is its willingness to have the tail of pragmatics wag the dog of semantics. I myself find the pre-emption unfortunate, though I should hasten to add that Professor Purtill and I share something of a common view about the problems that should be solved by a decent account of fictionality; and some of our own solutions happen in fact to coincide. We part company, however, in respect of the following two theses.
Thesis (1). Professor Purtill holds that the sentences literally constitutive of a piece of fiction are neither true nor false, that they do not make assertions, that (therefore) they do not make assertions about what they would appear to be about. Such sentences in fact tell tales, and in such nonassertive uses, they are spared the burdens of all but the limits of semantic significance. That is, they are not true and they are not false.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © The Authors 1978
Footnotes
An earlier version of this note was read to the American Philosophical Association (Western Division) in Chicago in April1977, as a reply to Richard L. Purtill's “Telling the Tale.” This version owes a debt to Professor Edwin A. Martin, Jr. who acted as referee for the Canadian Journal of Philosophy. With his permission I have made extensive use of several of his comments.
References
1 Woods, John The Logic of Fiction: A Philosophical Sounding of Deviant Logic, Mouton & Co., 1974.Google Scholar