You can do whatever you want. I'm just saying if you have a better interpretation of his work, explain it, but I'm moving forward. — Sam26
My opinion is that you don't understand the Tractatus, so no, I'm not going to discuss it with you. — Sam26
Just write a summary of the Tractatus, maybe I'm wrong. — Sam26
Let's hear your summary, write something instead of making silly statements. — Sam26
y purpose in creating this summary is not to necessarily debate with people about this or that interpretation, but to just summarize the main points in the Tractatus. — Sam26
Eh, for some it seems to be solely about the author's perspective. Perhaps this comes from how I approach most philosophy, which is jumping off points for how one's own thinking relates, contends, or aligns with the author. Analysis is necessary and a good didactic exercise, but I see it as the starting point for later doing synthesis, comparison, and ultimately, evaluation. I guess that butts up against other, more static approaches to the primary text (or secondary literature that often is employed with those like Witt, Nietzsche, Derrida, Heidegger, and the like...).
If you feel unable or unwilling to have a textual discussion in a textual thread, I don't know what to say! — fdrake
I'm not sure why you would make such a statement. You've witnessed me in several of the threads on Wittgenstein. When have I been unwilling to generally engage? I may not engage with everyone, but I've engaged with people in my threads, including you. So, I don't know what to say. — Sam26
Given Wittgenstein's logic about what can be said within the limits of the world of facts, anything that goes beyond the world of facts (beyond the propositions of natural science) is metaphysical and outside the limit of what can be said. — Sam26
Which statements support this interpretation? — Paine
"The totality of true propositions is the total natural science (or the totality of the natural sciences)" (4.11) — 013zen
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