Home

nonfactuality

Nonfactuality refers to the quality or state of content that does not claim to represent the world as it is or cannot be verified as fact. It encompasses fiction, satire, fantasy, speculation, hypothetical reasoning, and counterfactual scenarios. The term is often discussed in contrast to factuality and verifiability, and it can apply to texts, media, discourse, and representations.

In literature and art nonfactuality is deliberate, enabling world-building, allegory, and narrative experimentation. In philosophy and

In journalism and public discourse, identifying nonfactual content is essential to assess credibility. Satire and parody

Assessment of nonfactuality involves provenance, authorship, corroboration, and the degree of verifiability. Context and audience expectations

See also factuality, veracity, fiction, satire, misinformation, rumors, counterfactuals, epistemology.

linguistics,
counterfactuals
express
conditional
outcomes
that
would
obtain
under
different
circumstances
and
are
treated
as
ideas
rather
than
facts
within
standard
truth
conditions.
Nonfactual
content
can
also
be
hypothetical
or
provisional,
awaiting
evidence
or
context.
rely
on
nonfactual
cues
while
delivering
critique,
whereas
misinformation
and
fabricated
content
imitate
factual
presentation
to
mislead.
Distinguishing
labels
such
as
fictional,
hypothetical,
or
unverified
helps
readers
and
tools
like
fact-checkers.
influence
interpretation.
Ethically,
presenting
nonfactual
material
as
fact
can
cause
harm,
whereas
clearly
labeled
nonfactual
material
serves
artistic,
educational,
or
critical
purposes.