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- Paradox_of_fiction abstract "The paradox of fiction is a philosophical problem about how people can experience strong emotions from purely fictional things, such as art, literature, and imagination. The paradox draws attention to an everyday issue of how people are moved by things which, in many ways, do not really exist. Although the ontology of fictional things in general has been discussed in philosophy since Plato, the paradox was first suggested by Colin Radford and Michael Weston in 1975. After Radford and Weston's original paper, they and others have continued the discussion by giving the problem slightly differing formulations and solutions.".
- Paradox_of_fiction thumbnail Bernhardt_Hamlet2.jpg?width=300.
- Paradox_of_fiction wikiPageID "36266017".
- Paradox_of_fiction wikiPageLength "4189".
- Paradox_of_fiction wikiPageOutDegree "21".
- Paradox_of_fiction wikiPageRevisionID "706427702".
- Paradox_of_fiction wikiPageWikiLink Aesthetic_emotions.
- Paradox_of_fiction wikiPageWikiLink Category:Aesthetics.
- Paradox_of_fiction wikiPageWikiLink Category:Fiction.
- Paradox_of_fiction wikiPageWikiLink Category:Ontology.
- Paradox_of_fiction wikiPageWikiLink Category:Paradoxes.
- Paradox_of_fiction wikiPageWikiLink Colin_Radford.
- Paradox_of_fiction wikiPageWikiLink Fiction.
- Paradox_of_fiction wikiPageWikiLink File:Bernhardt_Hamlet2.jpg.
- Paradox_of_fiction wikiPageWikiLink Kendall_Walton.
- Paradox_of_fiction wikiPageWikiLink List_of_paradoxes.
- Paradox_of_fiction wikiPageWikiLink Mimesis.
- Paradox_of_fiction wikiPageWikiLink Noël_Carroll.
- Paradox_of_fiction wikiPageWikiLink Ontology.
- Paradox_of_fiction wikiPageWikiLink Paradox.
- Paradox_of_fiction wikiPageWikiLink Peter_Lamarque.
- Paradox_of_fiction wikiPageWikiLink Philosophy.
- Paradox_of_fiction wikiPageWikiLink Plato.
- Paradox_of_fiction wikiPageWikiLink Samuel_Taylor_Coleridge.
- Paradox_of_fiction wikiPageWikiLink Suspension_of_disbelief.
- Paradox_of_fiction wikiPageWikiLinkText "Paradox of fiction".
- Paradox_of_fiction wikiPageWikiLinkText "paradox of fiction".
- Paradox_of_fiction wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Philosophical_paradoxes.
- Paradox_of_fiction wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Paradox_of_fiction subject Category:Aesthetics.
- Paradox_of_fiction subject Category:Fiction.
- Paradox_of_fiction subject Category:Ontology.
- Paradox_of_fiction subject Category:Paradoxes.
- Paradox_of_fiction hypernym Problem.
- Paradox_of_fiction type Disease.
- Paradox_of_fiction type Genre.
- Paradox_of_fiction type Concept.
- Paradox_of_fiction type Genre.
- Paradox_of_fiction comment "The paradox of fiction is a philosophical problem about how people can experience strong emotions from purely fictional things, such as art, literature, and imagination. The paradox draws attention to an everyday issue of how people are moved by things which, in many ways, do not really exist. Although the ontology of fictional things in general has been discussed in philosophy since Plato, the paradox was first suggested by Colin Radford and Michael Weston in 1975.".
- Paradox_of_fiction label "Paradox of fiction".
- Paradox_of_fiction sameAs Q7134451.
- Paradox_of_fiction sameAs m.0k2clxb.
- Paradox_of_fiction sameAs Q7134451.
- Paradox_of_fiction wasDerivedFrom Paradox_of_fiction?oldid=706427702.
- Paradox_of_fiction depiction Bernhardt_Hamlet2.jpg.
- Paradox_of_fiction isPrimaryTopicOf Paradox_of_fiction.