IIRC from some biographical thing I read he never bothered to read Aristotle in his lifetime. — Count Timothy von Icarus
You can lead a horse to water. No need to beat it to the death if it's not particularly thirsty. — Outlander
What are your main disagreeances or suggestions for alternate interpretation you think could lead to greater understanding or utility of his works in the simplest most direct way and why?
eg. Debater A believes when Wittgenstein claims/makes reference to X it alludes to Y, while I believe X is actually a case against Y in favor of Z... etc, etc. — Outlander
That sounds deep, and there is wisdom in it - words really do get in the way of what they are trying to do, sometimes - but I sum up Wittgenstein as saying "Let me explain to you how there is no such thing as an explanation." — Fire Ologist
:smirk::up:I sum up Wittgenstein as saying "Let me explain to you how there is no such thing as an explanation." — Fire Ologist
Heidegger tells a long story about how the concerns of philosophy were corrupted by some elements of its practice. — Paine
If you're not into analytics, and find it unimportant in making a view in philosophy, then Wittgenstein's is not the proper philosophy for your purpose. I have not used Wittgenstein in any of my ideas in a long time. I have increasingly sympathized with Aristotle -- back to basics. Back to our origin. It's okay to use ordinary language (here it is Wittgenstein) in explaining the world. — L'éléphant
The work intends to establish a thesis and fails at it.
The work does not intend to establish a thesis, so it is mental floss. — Paine
It seems like Wittgenstein's work is inherently resistant to interaction with the rest of philosophy. Thoughts? — Leontiskos
He says very little about the history of philosophy. Some claim he had little knowledge of it. Plato is an interesting exception. — Fooloso4
I say this too because I notice a tendency whereby when you question Wittgenstein's ideas, the only answer that seems to be legitimate to the majority who jump on these threads is to quote another line from Wittgenstein.. As if you cannot refute Wittgenstein, you can only have varying levels of understanding of Wittgenstein. — schopenhauer1
Have you tried to make a poll on how many here actually understands the writings of Wittgenstein?It is HOW specifically Wittgenstein is often employed. — schopenhauer1
Have you tried to make a poll on how many here actually understands the writings of Wittgenstein? — L'éléphant
Would you be willing to recognize that you are offering me a "tails you lose, heads I win" set of alternatives?
What can either of us be talking about in this context? — Paine
I would not call it 'gatekeeping' but you have often offered an undialectical version of the works.
In many cases, you seem to ride two horses at the same time:
The work intends to establish a thesis and fails at it.
The work does not intend to establish a thesis, so it is mental floss. — Paine
The "mental floss" made me chuckle :smile:.
Indeed I tend to think the first about Tractatus and the second about PI. I think this gets into tricky territory, and adds to the dbaggery here..
People will often say that Witt has to be "elusive" in a way, because he is "showing" and cannot just "say", thus giving him exempt status from explanation.
But other times, I see that he has an actual argument which I then go to refute, but then am gatekept from thus refuting without the special pass of using Wittgenstein to unrefute myself. — schopenhauer1
Do I really want polygamy for both of us, or do I just want absolute freedom for me combined with control over her?” After conversations with Amir about Stoicism, Nietzsche, and other philosophers, he understood freedom in a new way—not as the ability to do whatever he wanted but as a conscious decision to live in a certain way. “You can actually make a choice to limit yourself,” he told me. “I stopped looking at my wife as someone limiting my freedom. I took responsibility for my choice.”
Eek.. I don't even want to know, honestly.. That in itself will devolve into who can show off how much Wittgenstein is beyond really "knowing"... — schopenhauer1
This gets to one of my confusions with contemporary "philosophy as therapy," and therapy in general. The goal seems to be "to feel good," rather than "to be good." — Count Timothy von Icarus
That was excellent. Wittgenstein answers the question. The rest of us are too busy embarassed by or ignoring the answer. — ENOAH
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