The Fake, the False, and the Fictional

In William Irwin (ed.), The Ultimate Daily Show and Philosophy. Wiley. pp. 23–37 (2013)
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Abstract

According to a survey conducted by the Pew Research Institute, regular Daily Show viewers seem to learn about current events from the self‐billed “fake news” program. The question of how fake news can inform people about real news touches on a question posed by philosophers: How do we learn truth from a work of fiction, something typically full of falsehoods? After all, a typical work of fiction is about pretend characters in pretend situations doing pretend things. Where's the truth in such a story, where's the reality? If fake news is classified as fiction, and if we can understand how fiction conveys truth, then we can understand how The Daily Show conveys real news to its viewers. Along the way, this chapter looks at many examples to see just how The Daily Show pulls this off.

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