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Intentional Fallacy |
 | | This fact does not refute the claims of the so-called intentional fallacy because there may be works of literature where the author does not intend to express a certain opinion or point of view regarding the subject matter of her work. |
 | | Juhl argues that the intentions of the author determine the meaning of the text, and so if we are able, by biographical evidence or other kinds of "external" evidence, to gain more insight into the nature and hence intentions of the author, then ipso facto we gain insight into the meaning of the authorial text. |
 | | If intentions are often unconscious, it should not come as a surprise that the poet-as-annotator may not be aware of all implications of what he wrote as poet, and he may emphasize, in his role as annotator, certain aspects of the poem that are not necessarily the most central, given his intentions as writing-poet. |
| web.uct.ac.za /depts/philosophy/intent.htm (3213 words) |
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