@article {1243, title = {Contribution to Fictional Epistemology}, journal = {Organon F}, volume = {22}, number = {1}, year = {2015}, pages = {133-144}, type = {State}, abstract = {In his article {\textquotedblleft}Who is Who in the Fictional World{\textquotedblright}, Petr Koťátko argues that fictional worlds are, in general, complete, that is the logical law of the excluded middle holds in fictional worlds, though he admits that there are exceptions{\textemdash}he mentions Samuel Beckett{\textquoteright}s trilogy as an example. The present article agrees with both these conclusions, and it continues Koťátko{\textquoteright}s discussion by suggesting an explanation why so many scholars have claimed that fictional worlds in general are incomplete, and by presenting different kinds of exceptions from Koťátko{\textquoteright}s basic position, and, finally, by sketching alternative interpretations of these examples of incomplete fictional worlds.}, keywords = {Completeness, fictional worlds, incompleteness}, url = {http://www.klemens.sav.sk/fiusav/doc/organon/prilohy/2015/1/133-144.pdf}, author = {Rossholm, G{\"o}ran} }