FusionKnight
It's not my fault!
Better yet how about we stop this non-logical distinction between fantasy and reality. This distinction is a human created ideal, independent of existing truth.
(WARNING: This will mess with your mind, stop reading if you wish to stay sane)
My mind exists, an assumption I can make because without it I'm not going to get anywhere for a while. Now the mind itself is like computer software, independent of the hardware it is considered a necessary component of itself. Despite the fact that without the hardware the software cannot exist since it is only a pattern, a design. Now my point is that our minds are affected by physical reality but are themselves intangible values, no weight, no mass. In fact you could make a clear distinction between the intangible design that is who we are and the collected matter arranged in this design that is what we are.
From this we can logically discern that all fantasy and fictional characters are as real as the minds that created them. Entities that do exist even though they do not exist in scope that we do. The distinction between reality and fiction blurs further when we consider fictional entities affect or interact with the real world. For example if people believe in a god or spirit and act with faith in its persona, how far is that from being "Real".
I once argued that if souls exist then a statue that personifies a particular emotion or feeling would logically have a soul, given to it by the sculptor. It's tangible, it can be unmade and has some degree of a soul; hard to argue that the character that is the statue isn't real in some way.
Now I bet you’re wondering if I believe any of this, well no, the whole reality of fiction concept is just a mental experiment of mine. But it's still fascinating.
Thank you, Cognisant, for that wonderful segue into a topic that fascinates me. I thought I'd break it out into its own thread, so we could more fully explore it. I'm going to double-post here, because my initial thoughts on this topic are a bit long. I thought it'd be better to split them out.