Paradox of fiction

The paradox of fiction, or the paradox of emotional response to fiction, is a philosophical dilemma that questions how people can experience strong emotions to fictional things. The primary question asked is the following: How are people moved by things which do not exist? The paradox draws upon a set of three premises that seem to be true prima facie but upon closer inspection produce a contradiction. Although the ontology of fictional things in general has been discussed in philosophy since Plato,[1] the paradox was first suggested by Colin Radford and Michael Weston in their 1975 paper How Can We Be Moved by the Fate of Anna Karenina?.[2] Since Radford and Weston's original paper, they and others have continued the discussion by giving the problem slightly differing formulations and solutions.[3]

The paradox of fiction asks why we experience strong emotions when, for example, we are watching Hamlet on stage while at the same time knowing that it is not really Hamlet but merely an actor.

The paradox

The basic paradox is as follows:[1]

  1. People have emotional responses to characters, objects, events etc. which they know to be fictitious.
  2. In order for us to be emotionally moved, we must believe that these characters, objects, or events, truly exist.
  3. No person who takes characters or events to be fictional at the same time believes that they are real.

The paradox is that all three premises taken individually seem to be true, but can not all be true at the same time. If any two points (e.g. 1 and 3) are taken to be true, then the third (e.g. 2) must either be false or else produce a contradiction.

Origin

In 1975, philosophers Colin Radford and Michael Weston published their paper How Can We Be Moved by the Fate of Anna Karenina?[4] In it, Radford and Weston discuss the idea of emotional responses to fiction, drawing upon the character Anna Karenina from Leo Tolstoy's novel Anna Karenina.[4] Their central inquiry is how people can be moved by things that do not exist. In their paper, they concluded that our emotional responses to fiction are irrational.[4] In 1978, American philosopher Kendall Walton published the paper Fearing Fictions, in which he addresses Radford and Weston's paradox.[5] This paper served as the impetus for Walton's Make-believe theory, his major contribution to philosophy. The conversation that Radford, Weston, and Walton started on the topic of emotional responses to fiction has continued and evolved to this day.

Developments

The debate about the paradox of fiction has evolved immensely since its introduction by Radford and Walton. When the paradox was first formulated, the cognitive theory of emotions was a dominant force in philosophical thought.[5] For cognitivists, emotions involve judgments or beliefs. For example, one's anger at somebody involves the judgment or belief of wrongdoing by that somebody.[5] Similarly, premise 2 involves the judgment that fictitious characters truly exist.[5] Therefore, for cognitivists, premise 2 seems just as true as the other premises and subsequently there is a true paradox, which is resolved by rejecting premise 1[5]

However, nowadays, cognitivism is not as influential and very few people accept premise 2.[6] This is in part due to the strong nature of the premise that results from the phrase "truly exists."[6] People are emotionally moved by things and people from the past as well as the hypothetical future, including things that have not happened and may not ever happen.[6] Also, people seem to be capable of being moved by irrational emotions caused by phobias.[6] These disprove the "truly exists" phrase.[6] Instead of cognitivist ideas, academics advocate other theories such as appraisal, perceptual, and feeling theories.[5] In these theories, emotions do not involve judgments or beliefs and consequently premise 2 is not true prima facie, nullifying the paradox of fiction entirely.[5]

Some academics who propose solutions to the paradox that involve the denial of premise 1 or 3 even deny premise 2 as well.[6] For example, although Walton argues for the denial of premise 1 because Sally does not literally pity Ana, he also questions the truthfulness of premise 2 because of cases of irrational emotion. [6]

Despite the popular rejection of premise 2, academics are still interested in the paradox and seriously consider other solutions.[6] Robert Stecker argues that studying the paradox is nevertheless important for understanding our emotional responses to fiction.[6]

Future areas of research include the paradox of fiction in video games.[5] Important questions include the following. "How does this idea challenge the truism that one cannot interact with fictional characters?" "Are emotional responses to videogame characters different from emotional responses to traditional fiction characters?"

Responses and proposed solutions

The various proposed solutions to the paradox can be divided into three basic groups:[1][3]

Pretense theory

First is the pretend or the simulation theories, proposed by Kendall Walton in his seminal paper Fearing Fiction (1978) and built upon in subsequent works.

The pretend theory denies premise 1, that people have emotional responses to fictitious things.[7] The theory argues that we do not experience real emotions with fiction but rather something less intense.[7] We experience quasi-emotions that we imagine to be real emotions.[7] For example, when watching a horror movie where the monster makes an attack towards the viewer (towards the camera), the viewer can be startled but does not truly fear for his or her life.[7]

Walton's view takes the assumption that one who experiences genuine emotion towards an "entity" must believe that said entity both exists and has features such that the emotion is warranted.[7] For example, if one is to genuinely display fear towards an entity, one must believe that the entity exists and has features like being dangerous, warranting the emotion of fear.[7] However, since people consuming fiction usually don't believe in the genuine existence of the fictitious things or events, one cannot feel genuine emotion.[7]

Thought theory

Second is the thought theories, for example from Peter Lamarque, Noël Carroll, and Robert J. Yanal.

The thought theories deny premise 2 and claim that we can have genuine emotions from things even if we do not believe them to exist.[8]

Illusion theory

Third is the illusion or realist theories, for example from Alan Paskow.

The illusion theories deny premise 3 and claim that, in a way, the fictional characters are real. They suggest that Samuel Taylor Coleridge was right saying that fiction involves a "willing suspension of disbelief", i.e. believing in the fiction while engaging with it.

See also

References

  1. Paskow, Alan (2004). The Paradoxes of Art : A phenomenological investigation. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-82833-3.
  2. Radford, Colin; Weston, Michael (January 1975). "How can we be moved by the fate of Anna Karenina?". Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, Supplementary Volumes. 49: 67–93. doi:10.1093/aristoteliansupp/49.1.67. JSTOR 4106870.
  3. Schneider, Steven. "The Paradox of Fiction". Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Retrieved 27 June 2012.
  4. Radford, Colin; Weston, Michael (1975). "How Can We be Moved by the Fate of Anna Karenina?". Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, Supplementary Volumes. 49: 67–93. doi:10.1093/aristoteliansupp/49.1.67. JSTOR 4106870.
  5. Konrad, Eva-Maria; Petraschka, Thomas; Werner, Christiana (2018-09-15). "The Paradox of Fiction – A Brief Introduction into Recent Developments, Open Questions, and Current Areas of Research, including a Comprehensive Bibliography from 1975 to 2018". JLT Articles (in German). 12 (2): 193–203. doi:10.1515/jlt-2018-0011. ISSN 1862-8990. S2CID 149464237.
  6. Stecker, R. (2011). "Should We Still Care about the Paradox of Fiction?". The British Journal of Aesthetics. pp. 295–308. doi:10.1093/aesthj/ayr019. Retrieved 2020-02-19.
  7. Stock, Kathleen (August 2006). "Thoughts on the 'Paradox' of Fiction". Postgraduate Journal of Aesthetics. 3: 37–58 via philarchive.
  8. Podgorski, Daniel (November 13, 2015). "Why Stories Make Us Feel: Colin Radford's So-called "Paradox of Fiction" and How Art Prompts Human Emotion". The Gemsbok. Your Friday Phil. Retrieved February 22, 2016.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.