"In a mere six decades mass media has 'naturalized' (or normalized) even patent nonsense. Ramsey knew of what he spoke. But climate change may be the cure for saying to death (and to the already dead) what can only be shown. 'Civilization' is just a symbolic prophylactic. Gödel's starvation was telling because he knew he couldn't show the blind that they are blind. Still. No one, except the mad or imbecilic (e.g. martyrs), is ever "born posthumously". (Except Beckett, Cioran & Sergio Leone.) Tell them I've lived too fucking long but not long enough to see what comes next. (We never do.)"What do you think Wittgenstein would have said about life, philosophy, economics nowadays? — Shawn
life — Shawn
I'll start.
What do you think Wittgenstein would have said about life, philosophy, economics nowadays? — Shawn
As Wittgenstein's friend and colleague Frank Ramsey put it, "What we can't say we can't say, and we can't whistle it either."
Sorry, I only trust camels...are you a camel ?Wittgenstein would have killed himself, trust me — Wittgenstein
Thus, even the philosophical achievements of the Tractatus itself are nothing more than useful nonsense; once appreciated, they are themselves to be discarded. The book concludes with the lone statement:
"Whereof one cannot speak, thereof one must be silent."
(Tractatus 7) This is a stark message indeed, for it renders literally unspeakable so much of human life. As Wittgenstein's friend and colleague Frank Ramsey put it,
"What we can't say we can't say, and we can't whistle it either."
It was this carefully-delineated sense of what a logical language can properly express that influenced members of the Vienna Circle in their formulation of the principles of logical positivism. Wittgenstein himself supposed that there was nothing left for philosophers to do. True to this conviction, he abandoned the discipline for nearly a decade...
[Then]:
...One application of the new analytic technique that Wittgenstein himself worked out appears in several connected sections of the posthumously-published Philosophical Investigations (1953).
...Wittgenstein pointed out that if we did indeed have private inner experiences, it would be possible to represent them in a corresponding language.
....Just so, the use of language for pains or other sensations can only be associated successfully with dispositions to behave in certain ways. Pain is whatever makes someone (including me) writhe and groan.
You should read philosophical investigation alongside tractatus and compare both of them. Take your time. — Wittgenstein
To understand Wittgenstein, you need to be like him to a certain extend. — Wittgenstein
Wittgenstein would have killed himself, trust me — Wittgenstein
He would definitely shoot himself if he accidentally browsed thephilosophyforum.com — Wittgenstein
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