•  37
    David Davies: Aesthetics and Literature (review)
    Estetika: The European Journal of Aesthetics 45 (1): 108-117. 2008.
    A review of David Davies’s Aesthetics and Literature (London & New York: Continuum, 2007, 212 pp. ISBN 0826496121).
  •  106
    On the Body of Literary Persuasion
    Estetika: The European Journal of Aesthetics 47 (1): 51-70. 2010.
    In this paper, the author argues that literary works have distinct cognitive significance in changing their readers’ beliefs. In particular, he discusses ‘philosophical fictions’ and truthclaims that they may imply. Basing himself broadly on Aristotle’s view of the enthymeme, he argues that a work of literary fiction persuades readers of its truths by its dramatic structure, by illustrating or implying the suppressed conclusion. Further, he suggests that it is exactly this ‘literary persuasion’ …Read more
  •  60
    Truth-Claiming in Fiction: Towards a Poetics of Literary Assertion
    Nordic Journal of Aesthetics 20 (38): 34. 2009.
    In the contemporary analytic philosophy of literature and especially literary theory, the paradigmatic way of understanding the beliefs and attitudes expressed in works of literary narrative fiction is to attribute them to an implied author, an entity which the literary critic Wayne C. Booth introduced in his influential study The Rhetoric of Fiction. Roughly put, the implied author is an entity between the actual author and the narrator whose beliefs and attitudes cannot be appropriately ascrib…Read more
  •  118
    Literary Fictions as Utterances and Artworks
    Theoria 76 (1): 68-90. 2010.
    During the last decades, there has been a debate on the question whether literary works are utterances, or have utterance meaning, and whether it is reasonable to approach them as such. Proponents of the utterance model in literary interpretation, whom I will refer to as “utterance theorists”, such as Noël Carroll and especially Robert Stecker, suggest that because of their nature as linguistic products of intentional human action, literary works are utterances similar to those used in everyday …Read more
  •  72
    In this paper, my aim is to show that in Anglo-American analytic aesthetics, the conception of narrative fiction is in general realistic and that it derives from philosophical theories of fiction-making, the act of producing works of literary narrative fiction. I shall firstly broadly show the origins of the problem and illustrate how the so-called realistic fallacy – the view which maintains that fictions consist of propositions which represent the fictional world “as it is” – is committed thro…Read more
  •  563
    Aesthetic Appreciation of Nature and the Global Environmental Crisis
    Environmental Values 31 (1): 47-66. 2022.
    Global climate change has been characterised as the crisis of reason (Val Plumwood), imagination (Amitav Ghosh) and language (Elizabeth Rush), to mention some. The 'everything change', as Margaret Atwood calls it, arguably also impacts on how we aesthetically perceive, interpret and appreciate nature. This article looks at philosophical theories of nature appreciation against global environmental change. The article examines how human-induced global climate change affects the 'scientific' approa…Read more
  •  30
    Fiction and the Weave of Life
    Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 66 (4): 403-406. 2008.