I had interpreted Wittgenstein's claim about philosophy and therapy (there may be more than one?) not so much as a claim that philosophers are in need of therapy than a claim that achieving conceptual clarity in philosophy is akin to therapy. — Pierre-Normand
The reason for this is that philosophers confronts conceptual puzzles that stem from their deeply ingrained habits of thinking (many of them arising from subtle misuses of ordinary language). — Pierre-Normand
I think that the practice of philosophy and the philosopher are one and the same, according to Wittgenstein's ethos. — Shawn
Yes, well the bewitchment of our intelligence by the misuse of language, according to the latter Wittgenstein of the Investigations, is due to what, in your opinion? — Shawn
Didn't W simply mean that philosophy clarified conceptual issues for philosophical problems in much the same way that therapy is meant to provide insight into life challenges?
This only holds true if you believe that a lack of conceptual clarity is causing you harm. As someone who views truth and reality as either largely out of reach or contingent human constructs, I find that there’s only so much clarification I am interested in. — Tom Storm
Yes, I was using "philosophy" and "philosophers" rather interchangeably. I was rather highlighting the contrast between philosophy being in need of therapy (as if something was wrong with philosophy) and the philosophical process being akin to therapy. I was stressing the second idea although Wittgenstein might very well have meant it both ways. — Pierre-Normand
132. We want to establish an order in our knowledge of the use
of language: an order with a particular end in view; one out of many
possible orders; not the order. To this end we shall constantly be
giving prominence to distinctions which our ordinary forms of
language easily make us overlook. This may make it look as if we
saw it as our task to reform language.
Such a reform for particular practical purposes, an improvement in
our terminology designed to prevent misunderstandings in practice,
is perfectly possible. But these are not the cases we have to do with.
The confusions which occupy us arise when language is like an engine
idling, not when it is doing work.
133. It is not our aim to refine or complete the system of rules for
the use of our words in unheard-of ways.
For the clarity that we are aiming at is indeed complete clarity. But
this simply means that the philosophical problems should completely
disappear.
The real discovery is the one that makes me capable of stopping
doing philosophy when I want to.—The one that gives philosophy
peace, so that it is no longer tormented by questions which bring itself
in question.—Instead, we now demonstrate a method, by examples;
and the series of examples can be broken off.—Problems are solved
(difficulties eliminated), not a single problem.
There is not a philosophical method, though there are indeed
methods, like different therapies.
593. A main cause of philosophical disease—a one-sided diet: one
nourishes one's thinking with only one kind of example.
254. The substitution of "identical" for "the same" (for instance)
is another typical expedient in philosophy. As if we were talking about
shades of meaning and all that were in question were to find words
to hit on the correct nuance. That is in question in philosophy only
where we have to give a psychologically exact account of the temptation
to use a particular kind of expression. What we 'are tempted to say'
in such a case is, of course, not philosophy; but it is its raw material.
Thus, for example, what a mathematician is inclined to say about the
objectivity and reality of mathematical facts, is not a philosophy of
mathematics, but something for philosophical treatment.
255 . The philosopher's treatment of a question is like the treatment of an illness. — Philosophical Investigations
133. It is not our aim to refine or complete the system of rules for
the use of our words in unheard-of ways.
For the clarity that we are aiming at is indeed complete clarity. But
this simply means that the philosophical problems should completely
disappear. — Philosophical Investigations
why philosophers are in need of therapy — Shawn
Wittgenstein starts with this kind of singular logical standard in the Tractatus, what he later will call purity, and then in the Investigations he realizes that each different thing has its own criteria. — Antony Nickles
'We are not analyzing a phenomenon (e.g. thought) but a concept (e.g. that of thinking), and therefore the use of a word. So it may look as if what we were doing were Nominalism. Nominalists make the mistake of interpreting all words as names, and so of not really describing their use, but only, so to speak, giving a paper draft on such a description'. — (L. Wittgenstein Philosophical Investigations, I/§383)
What do you mean by "its own criteria"? — Shawn
In comparison to the Tractatus, which, as you point out, held everything that could be said to make sense to a generalized standard for truth [...] — Antony Nickles
In your other post you ask “what is the difference here being made about 'phenomena' and 'concepts about phenomena'?” It is explaining his method, not a different approach to the world. He is not avoiding phenomena, but he is looking at what we say about something because that tells us how we judge it. — Antony Nickles
'We are not analyzing a phenomenon (e.g. thought) but a concept (e.g. that of thinking), and therefore the use of a word. — (L. Wittgenstein Philosophical Investigations, I/§383)
What do you think a concept is? A thing in your head? — Banno
Then how is it that you and I can be said to have the same concept? — Banno
So you say sharing a common grammar makes it possible for us to understand concepts. — Banno
What are concepts? — Banno
Consider the concept blue, the concept democracy, and the concept of cycling. What do these have in common such that we can call them all concepts? — Banno
Concepts are (perhaps) governed by grammar, but isn't something more involved? — Banno
If it is all about the externalities of the topic, then I'm only concerned with the internal aspect of how concepts are understood. — Shawn
So concepts have "internal" and "external" aspects? We might leave aside for now how it is possible to talk about these "internal" aspects, and suppose that the grammar, since it is shared, is "external". See PI §385. — Banno
What do you make of PI §381-2? This by way of addressing your "what other factors are associated with concepts apart from grammar?" — Banno
So, I think, there is some internal aspect of how learning can at all take place... — Shawn
Not qualities, but uses. In addition to the grammar, there is what we do - we choose the blue bicycle and go for a ride. That's not grammar.Are you alluding to qualities of concepts — Shawn
But "And the question will then arise whether we are still willing to use the concept of 'calculating in the head' here—or whether in such circumstances it has lost its purpose, because the phenomena gravitate towards another paradigm." — Banno
It seems you think a concept is something only in one's mind, a rule to be followed. Do you think Wittgenstein would agree? — Banno
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