Taming the runabout imagination ticket

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 04-2021
Journal Synthese
Volume | Issue number 198 | Suppl. 8
Pages (from-to) 2029–2043
Number of pages 15
Organisations
  • Interfacultary Research - Institute for Logic, Language and Computation (ILLC)
Abstract
The ‘puzzle of imaginative use’ (Kind and Kung in Knowledge through imagination, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2016) asks: given that imagination is arbitrary escape from reality, how can it have any epistemic value? In particular, imagination seems to be logically anarchic, like a runabout inference ticket: one who imagines A may also imagine whatever B pops to one’s mind by free mental association. This paper argues that at least a certain kind of imaginative exercise—reality-oriented mental simulation—is not logically anarchic. Showing this is part of the task of solving the puzzle. Six plausible features of imagination, so understood, are listed. Then a formal semantics is provided, whose patterns of logical validity and invalidity model the six features.
Document type Article
Note In special issue: New Directions in the Epistemology of Modality.
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1007/s11229-018-1751-6
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