Personification without Impossible Content

Craig Bourne, Emily Caddick Bourne

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Abstract

Personification has received little philosophical attention, but Daniel Nolan has recently argued that it has important ramifications for the relationship between fictional representation and possibility. Nolan argues that personification involves the representation of metaphysically impossible identities, which is problematic for anyone who denies that fictions can have (non-trivial) impossible content. We develop an account of personification which illuminates how personification enhances engagement with fiction, without need of impossible content. Rather than representing an identity, personification is something that is done with representations – a matter of use rather than content – and involves only a comparison of possibilities. We illustrate our account using the personification of death in the film Meet Joe Black, and show that there are no grounds for taking it to be fictionally true that there is a metaphysically impossible identity between Death and death.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)165-179
Number of pages15
JournalBritish Journal of Aesthetics
Volume58
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 16 May 2018

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