The Enchantment of Words: Wittgenstein's Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus

Voorkant
Clarendon Press, 29 jun 2006 - 268 pagina's
Recent years have seen a great revival of interest in Wittgenstein's early masterpiece, the Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus. The Enchantment of Words is a study of that book, offering novel readings of all its major themes and shedding light on issues in metaphysics, ethics and the philosophies of mind, language, and logic. McManus argues that Wittgenstein's aim in this deeply puzzling work is to show that the 'intelligibility of thought' and the 'meaningfulness of language', which logical truths would delimit and metaphysics and the philosophy of mind and language would explain, are issues constituted by confusions. What is exposed is a mirage of a kind of self-consciousness, a misperception of the ways in which we happen to think, talk and act as reasons why we ought to think, talk and act as we do. The root of that misperception is our confusedly endowing words with a life of their own: we 'enchant', and are 'enchanted by', words, colluding in a confusion that transposes on to them, and the world which we then see them as 'fitting', responsibilities that are actually ours to bear. Such words promise to spare us the trouble, not only of thinking, but of living. In presenting this view, McManus offers readings of all of the major themes of the Tractatus, including its discussion of logical truth, objects, names, inference, subjectivity, solipsism and the ineffable; McManus offers novel explanations of what is at stake in Wittgenstein's comparison of propositions with pictures, of why Wittgenstein declared the point of the Tractatus to be ethical, of how a bookwhich infamously declares itself to be nonsensical can both clarify our thoughts and require of us that we exercise our capacity to reason in reading it, and of how Wittgenstein later came to re-evaluate the achievement of the Tractatus.
 

Inhoudsopgave

1 Introduction
1
2 Some Historical Preliminaries
14
3 Objects Names Facts and Propositions
29
4 The Method of the Tractatus
43
5 The Picture Analogy
65
6 Logical and Ontological Types
76
7 The Supposed Conformity of Language and World
90
8 Subjectivity
102
11 The General Form of the Proposition
140
12 Problem Cases for the General Form
162
13 Ethics and the Inexpressible
175
14 Ethics and the Ladder
188
15 Conclusion
213
The Later Wittgenstein
235
List of Abbreviations used for Particular Theses of the Tractatus
257
References
258

9 Objects Revisited
119
10 Method Revisited
129

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Over de auteur (2006)

Denis McManus is Reader and Director of Postgraduate Studies, University of Southampton

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