• Banno
    24.8k
    Perhaps a general discussion of his place in philosophy would be appropriate.

    Here's a starter.

    Wittgenstein’s Significance

    Two key points, according to the article.

    1. The rejection of the view of language as names and relations, in favour of language as use

    2. The rejection of the private mind, hidden from public view.

    A pertinent quote:

    Wittgenstein thought that human beings have an irresistible urge to philosophise but when we give in to this urge we often lose sight of the nature of familiar concepts and so fall into error and confusion.
    The majority of posts in this forum give ample examples.
  • 180 Proof
    15.3k
    Wittgenstein d.1951
  • TheMadFool
    13.8k
    I couldn't really wrap my head around Wittgenstein's philosophy of language games. The best I could do was interpret it as having to do with ambiguity of meaning. A particular word, e.g. "bug" means an insect in biology and in computer parlance it means an error in a code. If a biologist and a computer scientist were then to have a discussion on bugs then it's not that hard to see how productive or rather unproductive the discussion is going to turn out. The biologist and computer scientist would spend their entire lives talking about different things but believing they were talking about the same thing. A philosophical nightmare! No?

    Are Witgensteinian language games essentially about ambiguity? A language game x uses a word in one way but another language game y uses it differently. Since the use is different the meanings are different.

    Perhaps my take on Wittgenstein is the children's version of an idea that was written for mature adults. Whatever the case I have the gnawing suspicion that ambiguity has a role in language games.
  • jacksonsprat22
    99
    2. The rejection of the private mind, hidden from public view.Banno


    Rejection of private language. Not clear if he thought there was a mind.
  • jacksonsprat22
    99
    Are Witgensteinian language games essentially about ambiguity?TheMadFool

    No. There are only different uses.
  • Ciceronianus
    3k
    The majority of posts in this forum give ample examples.Banno

    I fear so, yes. Most of us are content--even glad--to remain in the fly-bottle.
  • Sam26
    2.7k
    I think the later Wittgenstein has contributed to a more careful linguistic analysis, which can lead to using language, especially in philosophy, in a more precise way. I think that we have to be careful about how we emphasize the phrase "use is meaning," because there are quite a few uses that are incorrect. In fact, Wittgenstein is criticizing philosophers for their use of words and/or propositions. Use has to be seen in the proper context, i.e., in the social context, but even this is easily misunderstood. I don't have any confidence that Wittgenstein will be clearly understood in a wider social context.

    One area of criticism is that there is a limit to language in terms of metaphysics. He still held onto this idea in his later philosophy. I think this is and was a mistake.
  • jacksonsprat22
    99
    One area of criticism is that there is a limit to language in terms of metaphysics. He still held onto this idea in his later philosophy. I think this is and was a mistake.Sam26

    Please explain what you mean, thanks.
  • Pneumenon
    469
    He had some important points to make, but his therapeutic project failed; people still do the kind of philosophy that Wittgensteinian therapy was supposed to "cure."

    We can argue back and forth all day about whether or not he's correct in his view of traditional philosophy. But the proof, I think, is in the pudding. 69 years later and the philosophers continue to philosophize. If philosophy is an illness, it appears to be terminal, for all of Ludwig's well-intentioned mental oncology.
  • jacksonsprat22
    99
    He had some important points to make, but his therapeutic project failed; people still do the kind of philosophy that Wittgensteinian therapy was supposed to "cure."Pneumenon

    I don't read him like that. I never thought he was commanding people what they're allowed to do.
  • Pneumenon
    469
    I don't read him like that. I never thought he was commanding people what they're allowed to do.jacksonsprat22

    Certainly not commanding, but if he was able to do what he said he wanted to do, then you would no longer want to do philosophy after reading him.
  • jacksonsprat22
    99
    Certainly not commanding, but if he was able to do what he said he wanted to do, then you would no longer want to do philosophy after reading him.Pneumenon

    I never got that from him. Care to explain?
  • Ciceronianus
    3k

    Well, the cure is one that must be self-administered. Many are loathe to be cured. They're like anti-vaxxers in that respect.
  • Phil Devine
    14
    The key idea in the later Wittgenstein is that our language is all right as it is; we do not need an ideal language. Careful attention to real world language will dissolve (not solve) philosophical problems; the fly will be out of the fly bottle and we will see the world rightly. PROBLEM: Deep controversy is already present in discourse before the philosopher arrives on the scene. Religion makes metaphysiical claims, and political discourse involves contested concepts, such as 'person' and 'marriage,'
  • jacksonsprat22
    99
    PROBLEM: Deep controversy is already present in discourse before the philosopher arrives on the scene. Religion makes metaphysiical claims, and political discourse involves contested concepts, such as 'person' and 'marriage,'Phil Devine

    Okay. Are you saying this is a problem for Wittgenstein? How?
  • Pneumenon
    469
    Well, the cure is one that must be self-administered. Many are loathe to be cured. They're like anti-vaxxers in that respect.Ciceronianus the White

    Quite so. Wittgenstein is completely correct that there are no philosophical problems.

    But if everybody is just gonna ignore him, then it doesn't help to say that. And in that respect, his therapeutic project has failed.
  • jacksonsprat22
    99
    But if everybody is just gonna ignore him, then it doesn't help to say that. And in that respect, his therapeutic project has failed.Pneumenon


    I really don't know why you keep saying that. Wittgenstein is not King of Philosophy.
  • Banno
    24.8k
    A language game is just something that we do with words that also invovles stuff in the real world, and that can be treated in a somewhat discrete way (discrete, not discreet).

    So the shop keeper example from PI, the builder calling "slab", and so on. Nothing too formidible. The point was to draw attention to the way we use language as part of our every day activities.
  • Banno
    24.8k
    Most of us are content--even glad--to remain in the fly-bottle.Ciceronianus the White
    The sheer joy of proving that I am the only observer in the world, for example. Or that everything had a beginign, or that it didn't. That you can't get something for nothing, or that you can. Or even that emotions are concepts.
  • Banno
    24.8k
    One area of criticism is that there is a limit to language in terms of metaphysics. He still held onto this idea in his later philosophy. I think this is and was a mistake.Sam26

    Interesting. I see him as advocating silence on metaphysical issues, and as this as one of his views that did not change over the course of his life.
  • Banno
    24.8k
    his therapeutic project failed; people still do the kind of philosophy that Wittgensteinian therapy was supposed to "cure."Pneumenon

    That's like saying medicine's therapeutic project failed because there are still sick people.
  • Banno
    24.8k
    The key idea in the later Wittgenstein is that our language is all right as it is; we do not need an ideal language. Careful attention to real world language will dissolve (not solve) philosophical problems; the fly will be out of the fly bottle and we will see the world rightly. PROBLEM: Deep controversy is already present in discourse before the philosopher arrives on the scene. Religion makes metaphysiical claims, and political discourse involves contested concepts, such as 'person' and 'marriage,'Phil Devine

    The problems are there before the philosopher arrives on the scene, sure. The role of philosophy is to sort through conceptual confusion in order to show how the problems arise; to show the fly the way out of the trap. So as a quick example, because we see causality every day, some say everything has a cause; and off they go looking for a first cause or an infinite regress. They take an every day use and misapply it.

    So I disagree; every day language is not, for Wittgenstein, alright - that view would be better attributed to Austin.
  • Banno
    24.8k
    But if everybody is just gonna ignore him,Pneumenon

    My cynical side uses this to explain why he is not popular amongst professional philosophers. They do not wish to do themselves out of a comfortable career.
  • Pneumenon
    469
    That's like saying medicine's therapeutic project failed because there are still sick people.Banno

    I think this is a tad uncharitable. Wittgenstein wants to cure a specific illness. The vaccination campaign against smallpox succeeded and there's no more smallpox.

    Perhaps we could say that Wittgenstein's project is ongoing, in that it has to dissolve problems as they arise, and problems will always keep arising. But only a minority of professional philosophers are on board with this project, and it looks as if it will stay that way. I think you're right about the reason why.

    I think that, assuming we agree on what Wittgenstein's therapeutic project is, it's helpful to ask what motivates it. Does it just see professional philosophy as a waste of time for a lot of really smart people? Is the point just to make the intelligentsia more productive? That seems wrong. It ought to be something more significant than that.
  • Janus
    16.2k
    That seems wrong. It ought to be something more significant than that.Pneumenon

    Didn't Wittgenstein himself remind us how little has been achieved when all the problems of philosophy have been (dis)solved?
  • h060tu
    120
    Late Wittgenstein remains one of the most influential philosophical contributions of modern times.
  • jacksonsprat22
    99
    Interesting. I see him as advocating silence on metaphysical issues, and as this as one of his views that did not change over the course of his life.Banno

    I think he believed metaphysics was incoherent.
  • jacksonsprat22
    99
    Late Wittgenstein remains one of the most influential philosophical contributions of modern times.h060tu


    He's the most important philosopher of the 20th Century.
  • h060tu
    120
    He's the most important philosopher of the 20th Century.jacksonsprat22

    Most important? I don't know about that. One of them. 20th century had dozens of important philosophers. I think Werner Heisenberg was more important than Wittgenstein. But Wittgenstein was definitely the most important in the Anglo-American analytic tradition.
  • jacksonsprat22
    99
    I think Werner Heisenberg was more important than Wittgenstein.h060tu

    Heisenberg would not call himself a philosopher. Most know him as a physicist.
  • h060tu
    120
    Heisenberg would not call himself a philosopher. Most know him as a physicist.jacksonsprat22

    And? Science was a form of natural philosophy. Newton called himself a philosopher, so did Galileo. Words are arbitrary descriptions.

    They call Wittgenstein a philosopher, but he essentially rejected all of the classical issues philosophy deals with.
bold
italic
underline
strike
code
quote
ulist
image
url
mention
reveal
youtube
tweet
Add a Comment

Welcome to The Philosophy Forum!

Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.