•  3
    The tower of goldbach and other impossible tales
    In Matthew Kieran & Dominic Lopes (eds.), Imagination, Philosophy and the Arts, Routledge. pp. 107-124. 2003.
  •  11
    Sartre, Wittgenstein, and learning from imagination
    In Peter Goldie & Elisabeth Schellekens (eds.), Philosophy and conceptual art, Oxford University Press. pp. 171--194. 2007.
  •  1495
    Thoughts on the 'paradox' of fiction
    Postgraduate Journal of Aesthetics 3 (2): 59-65. 2006.
    This paper concerns the familiar topic of whether we can have genuinely emotional responses such as pity and fear to characters and situations we believe to be fictional1. As is well known, Kendall Walton responds in the negative (Walton (1978); (1990): 195-204 and Chapter 7; (1997)). That is, he is an ‘irrealist’ about emotional responses to fiction (the term is Gaut’s (2003): 15), arguing that such responses should be construed as quasiemotions (Walton (1990): 245), of which their possessor im…Read more
  •  66
    On Davies' argument from relational properties
    Acta Analytica 20 (4): 24-31. 2005.
    In Art as Performance , David Davies identifies certain properties relevant to artistic appreciation of artworks that, he suggests, are naturally construed as belonging to the artist’s creative performance rather than to any product of that performance (the “work-product”). He further argues, against an anticipated opponent, that such properties cannot be excluded as irrelevant to artistic appreciation in any principled way. I argue that the cited properties can be intelligibly construed as prop…Read more
  •  218
    Resisting imaginative resistance
    Philosophical Quarterly 55 (221). 2005.
    Recently, philosophers have identified certain fictional propositions with which one does not imaginatively engage, even where one is transparently intended by their authors to do so. One approach to explaining this categorizes it as 'resistance', that is, as deliberate failure to imagine that the relevant propositions are true; the phenomenon has become generally known (misleadingly) as 'the puzzle of imaginative resistance'. I argue that this identification is incorrect, and I dismiss several …Read more
  •  208
    Imagining and Fiction: Some Issues
    Philosophy Compass 8 (10): 887-896. 2013.
    In this paper, I survey in some depth three issues arising from the connection between imagination and fiction: (i) whether fiction can be defined as such in terms of its prescribing imagining; (ii) whether imagining in response to fiction is de se, or de re, or both; (iii) the phenomenon of ‘imaginative resistance’ and various explanations for it. Along the way I survey, more briefly, several other prominent issues in this area too
  •  523
    My topic is a certain view about mental images: namely, the ‘Multiple Use Thesis’. On this view, at least some mental image-types, individuated in terms of the sum total of their representational content, are potentially multifunctional: a given mental image-type, individuated as indicated, can serve in a variety of imaginative-event-types. As such, the presence of an image is insufficient to individuate the content of those imagination-events in which it may feature. This picture is argued for,…Read more