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THIS MONTH: Philosophy of Fiction.

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TST Column
July 2026
TST Column
Jul 2026

THIS MONTH: Philosophy of Fiction.

Philosophy of Fiction explores truth in fiction and falsehoods in non-fiction.
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Listen to the column, or the research behind it.
Column 6 of 6 in the Understanding Philosophy series.
EXPLORE: An introduction to science-first philosophy.

Column Research

Stories: Science Philosophy Critical Thinking History Big Bang Metaphysics Evolution Biases Futurism Ancient History Ethics Reasoning

1 Essay + 6 Tidbits
1 Focus
Plus a bonus deep-dive article.
This Month:
— Philosophy of Fiction —
Philosophy of Fiction studies how stories relate to reality. Its central dichotomy explores truth in fiction and alignment with reality in nonfiction.
Greetings!

This month we return to the Understanding Philosophy series with On Truth in Fiction. Last time, we explored history as a disciplined attempt to tell true stories about what happened. This month, we turn to fiction: invented stories that can still reveal truth.

Philosophy of Fiction explores a fascinating tension: truth in fiction and falsehoods in non-fiction. A novel, film, myth, or play may not describe an event that actually happened, but it still works with real materials: fear, grief, love, power, memory, courage, temptation, and consequence. Meanwhile, nonfiction can claim to report facts and still distort reality through framing, omission, exaggeration, or propaganda.

That is why fiction matters philosophically. Fiction is not reality denied. Fiction is reality recombined. This column explores how fictional worlds borrow reality as their background, how imagination bends fact without escaping it, and why invented stories can sometimes tell truths that ordinary factual summaries miss.

–Michael Alan Prestwood
6 Research Tidbits
Wisdom Builder Crossroads
The research, stories, and questions that inform this issue.

1 Story »

“Truth in Fiction” – Lewis, 1978
Fictional statements can be “true” inside an invented world, even when they are not true in actual history.

2 Quote »

“Truth is stranger than fiction…[which] is obliged to stick to possibilities;”
Fiction lives within the possibilities of reality. Truth must answer to reality itself.

3 Science »

Why does fiction feel real?
Walton argued that fiction works like a guided game of make-believe: the story becomes a prop that tells the mind what to imagine.

4Philosophy »

Can authors create fiction beyond our universe?
When you encounter fiction, test it. Every story you've encountered is a recombination of existing elements within our universe. We are not a deities; we are explorers.

5Critical Thinking »

How do we know what is true in a fictional world?
Stacie Friend challenges the simple split between fiction and fact. Fiction is not cut off from reality; it uses reality as its background.

6History!

What is the history of philosophy of fiction?
The first philosophy of fiction began with a simple question: “Is that story really true?”
Take the deep dive.
Linked Article
New This Week
Philosophy
Paper
TST Philosophy of Fiction: Imaginative Realism
Philosophy of Fiction
Imaginative Realism holds that fiction is reality recombined. The mind cannot imagine outside all reality; it can only reshape impressions gathered from reality into new things.
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