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    Myth and narrative can reach aspects of understanding tha... — Carmelics
    Home/Aesthetics
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    Supports→Storytelling is a necessary adjunct to philosophical argument, not merely decorative, because human nature combines irrational elements with the rational.

    Myth and narrative can reach aspects of understanding that rational argument alone cannot.

    AestheticsPhilosophy of Language
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    AestheticsPhilosophy of Language

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    3 topics

    Consciousness & Mind3 linked

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    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    Virtue Ethics
    1 linked
    Skepticism1 linked

    Related

    Human beings have limitations that pure rational argument cannot fully address.Human nature combines irrational elements with rational ones.Storytelling is a necessary adjunct to philosophical argument, not merely decora...

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    Any conclusions reached through rational argument within a fictional n...81%Human reason is not purely rational but is shaped by the same provisio...78%Religious and philosophical narratives (e.g., Kantian moral rationalit...75%Aristotle argues in the Rhetoric that successful arguments must have p...75%

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    AI-extracted
    SEP: plato-myths
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    “On the less radical version, the idea will be that the telling of stories is a necessary adjunct to, or extension of, philosophical argument, one which recognizes our human limitations, and—perhaps—the fact that our natures combine irrational elements with the rational” (Rowe 1999, 265). On a more radical interpretation, “the distinction between ‘the philosophical’ and ‘the mythical’ will—at one level—virtually disappear” (265). If we take into account that Plato chose to express his thoughts t

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