Literature and fiction, in various forms, both textual and oral, have an undeniable place in human growth and education: they are a constitutive part of our reality. This raises the question: how and what do we learn from fiction? Even when fiction does not mirror reality directly, can it still, explore, express, and teach us about the world? If so, how? In this special issue education becomes something of a link between the fictional and the real. Approaching fiction to learn from it, or learn with it, enables us to examine our experiences and to transform them in our everyday lives. The special issue, if perhaps for the most part indirectly, testifies to the various ways love of literature often expresses love of truth. Not because all th...
Teaching fiction is closely related to science because any sphere of science involves theo...
The contemporary debate in the philosophy of literature is strongly shaped by the anti-cognitivist c...
Many of us share a strong intuition that fictional literature possesses cognitive value in the sense...
Literature and fiction, in various forms, both textual and oral, have an undeniable place in human g...
In philosophical discussions of literature, there is a great deal of discussion about what’s been te...
In philosophical discussions of literature, there is a great deal of discussion about what’s been te...
In: Frank Gadinger, Martina Kopf, Ayşem Mert, and Christopher Smith (eds.). Political Storytelling: ...
Literature basically belongs to the nature of teaching. Henceforth, teaching literature has come up ...
Reality and fantasy fiction have often been seen as opposites. Fantasy fiction is many times seen as...
Perhaps, a work of fiction’s truth is the unfaltering manner in which its details guide the spectato...
Many of us share a strong intuition that fictional literature possesses cognitive value in the sense...
The subject of the work is the problem of the fictionality of literary texts. The work is divided in...
This dissertation attempts to answer the question, How is truth communicated through fiction? It b...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis is a sustained discussion of the relationship be...
Teaching fiction is closely related to science because any sphere of science involves theo...
Teaching fiction is closely related to science because any sphere of science involves theo...
The contemporary debate in the philosophy of literature is strongly shaped by the anti-cognitivist c...
Many of us share a strong intuition that fictional literature possesses cognitive value in the sense...
Literature and fiction, in various forms, both textual and oral, have an undeniable place in human g...
In philosophical discussions of literature, there is a great deal of discussion about what’s been te...
In philosophical discussions of literature, there is a great deal of discussion about what’s been te...
In: Frank Gadinger, Martina Kopf, Ayşem Mert, and Christopher Smith (eds.). Political Storytelling: ...
Literature basically belongs to the nature of teaching. Henceforth, teaching literature has come up ...
Reality and fantasy fiction have often been seen as opposites. Fantasy fiction is many times seen as...
Perhaps, a work of fiction’s truth is the unfaltering manner in which its details guide the spectato...
Many of us share a strong intuition that fictional literature possesses cognitive value in the sense...
The subject of the work is the problem of the fictionality of literary texts. The work is divided in...
This dissertation attempts to answer the question, How is truth communicated through fiction? It b...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis is a sustained discussion of the relationship be...
Teaching fiction is closely related to science because any sphere of science involves theo...
Teaching fiction is closely related to science because any sphere of science involves theo...
The contemporary debate in the philosophy of literature is strongly shaped by the anti-cognitivist c...
Many of us share a strong intuition that fictional literature possesses cognitive value in the sense...