Imagination and Belief: The Microtheories Model of Hypotheical Thinking

Journal of Consciousness Studies 23 (3-4):31-49 (2016)
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Abstract

Beliefs about hypothetical situations need to be 'quarantined' from factual representations, so that our inference processes do not make false conclusions about the real world. Nichols argued for the existence of a place where these special beliefs are kept: the pretence box. We show that this theory has a number of drawbacks, including its inability to account for simultaneously keeping track of multiple imagined worlds. We offer an explanation that remedies these problems: beliefs of content imagination each belong to some number of microtheories; systems of ideas tagged as being true or false only in certain contexts.

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Joseph Bicknell
King's College London
James E. Davies
University of Toronto, Mississauga

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