David K. Lewis, born in 1941, opened the modern technical doorway into fictional truth. In his model, we can say things like “in the Sherlock Holmes stories, Holmes lived at 221B Baker Street” without pretending Holmes was a historical person. That distinction helps separate empirical event truth from truth inside a fictional construction.
His 1978 paper, “Truth in Fiction,” asks what it means for a statement to be true within a fictional world, often framed in symbolic shorthand as “in fiction f, Φ.” This means, “Within the fictional story called f, the statement Φ is true.” The letter f stands for the fiction, while the Greek letter phi represents a statement made about it.
Lewis gave the question its modern analytic form, asking what makes a statement true within a fictional world. Aristotle had earlier argued that fiction can express universal truths about human life. The TST Idea of Ideas adds a different distinction: fictional worlds also borrow already-true ideas from reality. Trees, flight, mathematics, grief, and gravity do not become true because they appear rationally consistent within Star Wars. They remain empirically or rationally true because they belong to the Grand Rational Framework. The speculative story rearranges them alongside invented elements such as the Force. In this sense, fiction adopts reality as its starting framework, then modifies selected parts of it.