Philosophical views named for this property often draw on a book that compares “truths” with this property to the use of tree stumps as props in a child’s game about bears. Charles’s “quasi-fear” of green slime illustrates Kendall Walton’s solution to a paradox named for this property that concerns “emotional response.” A sentence about a man with this property is analyzed with an “in such-and-such” operator in a paper titled for “Truth in” it by David Lewis. Positions named for this property, like Hartry Field’s one for math, take their subjects to be “useful” entities with this property. This is the second of three title concepts of a book that uses a predicate that co-applies with greenness until time t to create a “New Riddle of Induction.” For 10 points, the title of a Nelson Goodman book groups what concept with “fact” and “forecast”? ■END■
ANSWER: fictional [accept being make-believe; accept fictionalism or word forms; accept Fact, Fiction, and Forecast, useful fictions, fictional truths, “Truth in Fiction,” paradox of fiction, or “Fearing Fictions”; prompt on non-existence, being pretend, or equivalents] (The book in the first line is Walton’s Mimesis as Make-Believe: On the Foundations of the Representational Arts.)
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= Average correct buzz position