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- Review author[S.]: J. Agassi (1970). Philosophy as Literature: The Case of Borges. Mind 79 (314):287-294.
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The year of the centennial of the Argentinean
writer Jorge Luis Borges is probably the right time to
exhume one of the links that this universal writer had
with William James. In 1945, Emece, a publisher from
Buenos Aires, printed a Spanish translation of William
James’s book Pragmatism, with a foreword by Jorge
Luis Borges.
In this short paper I try to present William James’s connection with the Argentinian writer Macedonio Fernández (1874-1952), who was in some
sense a mentor of Borges and might be considered the missing link between Borges and James.
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Borges, Calvino, and Eco are as noted for the intriguing philosophical puzzles they present as they are for their inventive literary styles. In their writings, sequences of causality are reversed, individuals switch identities, and stories of one person mirror those of others. Literary Philosophers brings together a group of distinguished philosophers, literary scholars, and comparativists to explore and debate the relationship between philosophy and literature in the works of these brilliant figures.
Jorge Luis Borges is working for decades now on the execution of the nightmare. Perhaps his most celebrated instance is "Tlon, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius ". It would take much work to sift the fabricated references in Borges' works from the ones deliberately misread from the over-emphasis on an author's casual remark, etc.
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