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Article

Trope analysis and folk intuitions

Details

Citation

Rennick S (2021) Trope analysis and folk intuitions. Synthese, 199 (1-2), pp. 5025-5043. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11229-020-03013-3

Abstract
This paper outlines a new method for identifying folk intuitions to complement armchair intuiting and experimental philosophy (X-Phi), and thereby enrich the philosopher¡¯s toolkit. This new approach ¨C trope analysis ¨C depends not on what people report their intuitions to be but rather on what they have made and engaged with; I propose that tropes in fiction (¡®you can¡¯t change the past¡¯, ¡®a foreknown future isn¡¯t free¡¯ and so forth) reveal which theories, concepts and ideas we find intuitive, repeatedly and en masse. Imagination plays a dual role in both existing methods and this new approach: it enables us to create the scenarios that elicit our intuitions, and also to mentally represent them. The method I propose allows us to leverage the imagination of the many rather than the few on both counts ¨C scenarios are both created and consumed by the folk themselves.

Keywords
folk intuitions, imagination, tropes, fiction, methodology

Journal
Synthese: Volume 199, Issue 1-2

StatusPublished
Funders
Publication date31/12/2021
Publication date online11/01/2021
Date accepted by journal24/12/2020
URL
PublisherSpringer Science and Business Media LLC
ISSN0039-7857
eISSN1573-0964

People (1)

Dr Steph Rennick

Dr Steph Rennick

Lecturer in Digital Media (Interactive), Communications, Media and Culture

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