User talk:Eulenspiegel1

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Nomen ad hoc (talk) 19:10, 15 December 2018 (UTC).[reply]

Fictional characters vs. mythical characters

Hello Eulenspiegel1, I think it's best to stop "discussing" in edit summaries and instead starting to discuss here. To get back to your example: Loki is a trickster (and I actually dislike to use P31 here, as it is rather a narrative role). But Loki is also a mythical character. As you had a look at Talk:Q4271324 you will have noticed that in this discussion there was a preference to seperate mythical entities from fictional ones. By making trickster (Q902180), which is used as P31-value on mythical characters, a subclass of fictional character you blur these boundaries. Any reason why you think this is bad? At best with references from the relevant areas of study? - Valentina.Anitnelav (talk) 09:39, 22 February 2019 (UTC)[reply]

There are three sorts of persons:
  1. Persons who real exist
  2. Persons who do not real exist
  3. Persons who we don't know if they real exist
Literary characters and mythical characters are both characters who do not real exist. If something is not real, we call it fictional.
At Talk:Q4271324 was written, that there is no author. That's in two ways wrong:
1. We do not need an author for fictional entities. If something is not real, it's fictional even without author. Maybe he mixed "literary character" and "fictional character".
2. Mythical characters have authors. Probably it's not only one author but many authors. And in most cases we don't know the author. Yet, there exists some people who created this mythical character. And these people are the authors of the mythical character.
--Eulenspiegel1 (talk) 09:49, 22 February 2019 (UTC)[reply]
That is actually not the striking difference between mythical and fictional characters. To copy my comment from this talk: "Fictional characters are characters from a work of fiction, with a certain author/creator. Those are entities not claimed to exist. Mythical entities are from traditions. They don't have a particular author/creator and belong to the worldview of a culture, where they appear with a certain claim of truth."
The differentiation in three classes (as you did it) is one that is reaonable in some cases, but not helpful in others (especially not in the study of myth and folklore and different cultures and societies). There is a difference between mythical and fictional characters in their epistemic and normative role. So it happens that mythical entity (Q24334685) is a subclass of hypothetical object (because they are assumed by the cultures they appear in). I'm not sure if you would call obsolete scientific theories "fictional scientific theories". -Valentina.Anitnelav (talk) 09:58, 22 February 2019 (UTC)[reply]
A small ad to my last entry:
A problem can be that some mythical and even some literary characters are not fictional: For example, Jesus (Q302) is a mythical character. Yet, there are evidences that he really lived as described in historical Jesus (Q51666).
The some problems are with literary characters: Till Eulenspiegel (Q164083) is a literary character but there are also some minor evidences that he possible real lived. Thus, I am thinking about giving him "instance of human whose existence is disputed (Q21070568)".
Now the answer to your response:
The following would be correct: "Literary characters are characters from a work of fiction, with an author/creator. Those are entities not claimed to exist."
For fictional characters this is not true. Fictional characters do not need a ceratin author/creator. Fictional characters can also be claimed to exist.
There might be a difference between mythical and literary characters. Yet, both are in most times fictional. Of course, there are in both cases exceptions: The mythical character Jesus (Q302) and the literary character Till Eulenspiegel (Q164083) are possibly not fictional. Yet, most of the mythical and the literary characters are fictional.
An obsolete scientific theory is more like a dead character. A dead character is an instance of character not an instance of fictional character. The same is with an obsolete scientific theory. --Eulenspiegel1 (talk) 10:16, 22 February 2019 (UTC)[reply]
On which source do you base those claims: ""Literary characters are characters from a work of fiction"/"Fictional characters do not need a ceratin author/creator. Fictional characters can also be claimed to exist."? - Valentina.Anitnelav (talk) 11:18, 22 February 2019 (UTC)[reply]
On which source do you base those claims: "Fictional characters are characters from a work of fiction, with a certain author/creator. Those are entities not claimed to exist." --Eulenspiegel1 (talk) 13:15, 22 February 2019 (UTC)[reply]
Well, to have three:
1) the account of the encyclopedia britannica (which focuses on the genre of fiction in literature), Fiction is "created from the imagination, not presented as fact" [1]. If the genre of Fiction is distinguished by not presenting things as facts, how should it claim its characters to exist?
2) In "The Forms of Folklore: Prose Narratives" William Bascom draws a distinction between folktales and myths by drawing on the concept of fiction: "Folktales are prose narratives which are regarded as fiction. They are not considered as dogma or history, they may or may not have happened, and they are not to be taken seriously.", in contrast to myth: "Myths are prose narratives which, in the society in which they are told, are considered to be truthful accounts of what happened in the remote past. They are accepted on faith; they are taught to be believed; and they can be cited as authority in answer to ignorance, doubt, or disbelief."
3) Margarete Bruun Vaage describes an orthodox view on fiction vs. non-fiction as the following: "The orthodox view in analytical film theory is that the difference between fiction and nonfiction is anchored in communicative practice. Whereas the creator of nonfiction can be seen as asserting something as true, the creator of fiction merely asks of its spectators that they imagine the work’s content." This article is interesting as it takes this view as oversimplifying things, but in the end she enhances this basic theory: "The solution is not to dismiss the basic theory, but to make finer distinctions. I argue that one difference between prototypical nonfiction and social realist fiction is that nonfiction asserts that its contents (characters and events) are true as tokens, e.g., this person experienced this. As fiction, a work of social realism calls for imagining. However, such a work also asserts that its contents are true as types, e.g., these types of persons experience these types of events.". So no existence-claims here, either.
Btw: fiction (Q8253) is not the same as a hoax (Q190084) or fake news (Q28549308), even though the word "fiction" is used sometimes used in everyday communication to refer to those kinds of things. - Valentina.Anitnelav (talk) 14:55, 22 February 2019 (UTC)[reply]