Wittgenstein at His WordA&C Black, 2004 M08 1 - 220 páginas Wittgenstein's work is notoriously difficult to understand and, at least superficially, deals almost exclusively with obscure and technical problems in logic and the philosophy of language. He once asked rhetorically: "What is the use of philosophy ... if it does not improve your thinking about the important questions of everyday life?". This book explains how Wittgenstein's idea of the value of philosophy shaped his philosophical method and led him to talk and write about the abstruse questions he dealt with in most of his work. This is not just another introductory overview of Wittgenstein's philosophy. It is one of the few that provide such an overview while also referring constantly to ethics and religion. Moreover, its interpretation of Wittgenstein is far from orthodox, as standard treatments of his work disregard or downplay his claims about what he was doing and why. Duncan Richter takes him at his word, showing the connections between Wittgenstein's aims, the various subjects he worked on (psychology, religion, aesthetics, etc.), and the way in which he worked on them. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 61
Página vi
... Religion 150 Sources of the alleged doctrines 150 Wittgenstein's avowed method and purpose in philosophy 154 Four varieties of religious belief 157 Implications for understanding and applying Wittgenstein's work 159 Getting ...
... Religion 150 Sources of the alleged doctrines 150 Wittgenstein's avowed method and purpose in philosophy 154 Four varieties of religious belief 157 Implications for understanding and applying Wittgenstein's work 159 Getting ...
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... Religion ' , which was published in Religious Studies 37 ( 2001 ) . It is reprinted with the permission of Cambridge University Press . This page intentionally left blank INTRODUCTION Ludwig Wittgenstein is widely Acknowledgements.
... Religion ' , which was published in Religious Studies 37 ( 2001 ) . It is reprinted with the permission of Cambridge University Press . This page intentionally left blank INTRODUCTION Ludwig Wittgenstein is widely Acknowledgements.
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... religion was Christian ) and , unlike some , he had a good idea of what was going on in his native Austria.2 It was during the Second World War that he prepared his Philosophical Investigations for publication . 3 It was not only ...
... religion was Christian ) and , unlike some , he had a good idea of what was going on in his native Austria.2 It was during the Second World War that he prepared his Philosophical Investigations for publication . 3 It was not only ...
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... religious goal . He valued clarity for its own sake . But what it means to say that clarity has a value of its own is best understood against a certain political , religious , ethical or cultural background , or else a desire for mere ...
... religious goal . He valued clarity for its own sake . But what it means to say that clarity has a value of its own is best understood against a certain political , religious , ethical or cultural background , or else a desire for mere ...
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... religion , aesthetics , free will and determinism , cause and effect , the philosophy of mathematics , and so on ? And , having done so , how could he avoid saying something substantive about at least some of these subjects ? Let me ...
... religion , aesthetics , free will and determinism , cause and effect , the philosophy of mathematics , and so on ? And , having done so , how could he avoid saying something substantive about at least some of these subjects ? Let me ...
Contenido
1 | |
9 | |
2 Nonsense | 45 |
3 Certainty | 85 |
4 Ethics | 117 |
5 Religion | 150 |
Conclusion | 181 |
Bibliography | 188 |
Index | 194 |
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Términos y frases comunes
arbitrary argue Basil Blackwell Cavell Certainty Chapter claim Conant concepts confusion context Conway Cora Diamond course Culture and Value D.Z. Phillips described doctrines doubt ethics expression fact false feeling Fideism foundation foundationalism foundationalist G.E.M. Anscombe G.H. von Wright G.K. Chesterton genstein grammar guage Hacker human Ibid idea imagine important instance James Conant justify kind language-game later Lectures logic London look Ludwig Wittgenstein mathematics meaning mind moral philosophy Mounce nonsense Norman Malcolm ordinary language Oxford particular perhaps person Peter Winch philo philoso Philosophical Investigations philosophical problems picture possible practice private language propositions question quoted reading religion religious beliefs rules Rush Rhees seems sense sentence solipsism someone speak Stanley Cavell stein Stroll superstition talk theory things thought tion Tractatus Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus trans true truth understand University Press Witt Wittgen Wittgenstein says Wittgenstein's method Wittgenstein's philosophy Wittgenstein's view Wittgensteinian philosophy words writes wrong York
Referencias a este libro
Wittgenstein and His Interpreters: Essays in Memory of Gordon Baker Guy Kahane,Edward Kanterian,Oskari Kuusela Sin vista previa disponible - 2007 |