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Featured researches published by Andrea Sauchelli.


New Literary History | 2011

Philosophical Perspectives on Fictional Characters

Paisley Nathan Livingston; Andrea Sauchelli

This paper takes up a series of basic philosophical questions about the nature and existence of fictional characters. We begin with realist approaches that hinge on the thesis that at least some claims about fictional characters can be right or wrong because they refer to something that exists, such as abstract objects. Irrealist approaches deny such realist postulations and hold instead that fictional characters are a figment of the human imagination. A third family of approaches, based on work by Alexius Meinong, seeks an alternative to the realist/irrealist dilemma. Neo-Meinongian theories rely upon a distinction between being and existence, the key contention being that unlike human beings, fictional characters have only the former. Having surveyed relevant work by contemporary metaphysicians and philosophers of language, this paper discusses issues related to the distinction between characters and other aspects of the content of fictions, including the relation between personality theory and literary conceptions of character.


Journal of Medical Ethics | 2014

Life extension and the burden of mortality: Leon Kass versus John Harris

Andrea Sauchelli

Some bioethicists have questioned the desirability of a line of biomedical research aimed at extending the length of our lives over what some think to be its natural limit. In particular, Leon Kass has argued that living longer is not such a great advantage, and that mortality is not a burden after all. In this essay, I evaluate his arguments in favour of such a counterintuitive view by elaborating upon some critical remarks advanced by John Harris. Ultimately, I argue that nothing substantial has been said by Kass to undermine the desirability of life-extending technologies.


Journal of Medical Ethics | 2017

Life-extending enhancements and the narrative approach to personal identity

Andrea Sauchelli

Various debates on the desirability and rationality of life-extending enhancements have been pursued under the presupposition that a generic psychological theory of personal identity is correct. I here discuss how the narrative approach to personal identity can contribute to these debates. In particular, I argue that two versions of the narrative approach offer good reasons to reject an argument against the rationality of (certain forms of) life-extending enhancements.


Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie | 2017

The early reception of Bernard Williams’ reduplication argument (1956–62)

Andrea Sauchelli

Abstract: The reduplication argument advanced by Bernard Williams in 1956 has greatly stimulated the contemporary debate on personal identity. The argument relies on a famous thought experiment that, although not new in the history of philosophy, has engaged some of the most influential contemporary philosophers on the topic. I propose here an interpretation of the argument and a reconstruction of the early reception that Williams’ paper had in the 6 years immediately after its publication. The works discussed include papers by C. B. Martin, G. C. Nerlich, R. Coburn, and J. M. Shorter.


Philosophical Papers | 2014

Sibley on ‘Beautiful’ and ‘Ugly’

Andrea Sauchelli

Abstract Frank Sibleys ideas have been particularly influential among contemporary philosophers interested in aesthetics. Most studies, however, have focused only on his earlier works. In this essay, I explore Sibleys account of the adjectives ‘beautiful’ and ‘ugly’, paying particular attention to three papers that have only recently been published and that have not yet received adequate attention. In particular, I discuss his account of the adjective ‘beautiful’, which relies on the controversial notion of an aesthetic ideal. In addition, I discuss an account of how aesthetic judgements may change in relation to our coming to know the kind of object being judged and whether, as Sibley maintains, ‘beautiful’ and ‘ugly’ are asymmetric in the sense specified by the author.


The Philosophical Quarterly | 2012

Functional Beauty, Architecture, And Morality: A Beautiful Konzentrationslager?

Andrea Sauchelli


Philosophical Studies | 2012

Fictional objects, non-existence, and the principle of characterization

Andrea Sauchelli


Philosophy East and West | 2016

Buddhist reductionism, fictionalism about the self, and Buddhist fictionalism

Andrea Sauchelli


The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism | 2013

The Merited Response Argument and Artistic Categories

Andrea Sauchelli


British Journal of Aesthetics | 2013

Functional Beauty, Perception, and Aesthetic Judgements

Andrea Sauchelli

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