§110-§115
I don't like these sections at all, and find them more ranty than substantial. The thematics we've come across before in more interesting contexts rear their head again although in far more a flaky manner: illusions of depth, the mistake of uniqueness, false appearances of essence, the way in which we are 'impressed' by these illusions, etc. One interesting connection to be made - I think these remarks actually shed light on one of the more enigmatic passages earlier in the
PI, namely, §38:
"Naming seems to be a strange connection of a word with an object. - And such a strange connection really obtains, particularly when a philosopher tries to fathom the relation between name and what is named by staring at an object in front of him and repeating a name, or even the word “this”, innumerable times. For philosophical problems arise when language goes on holiday. And then we may indeed imagine naming to be some remarkable mental act, as it were the baptism of an object. And we can also say the word “this” to the object, as it were address the object as “this” a a strange use of this word, which perhaps occurs only when philosophizing."
It was hard - for me anyway - to get a clear sense of these comments at the time, but the sections here (§110-§115 and its neighbours) make certain things about it clear, I think. Specifically, the 'strange connection' and 'repetitive staring' has to do with the (illusion) of
uniqueness, first mentioned in §93, in contrast to the (reality) of diversity, or what Witty thematizes under the rubric of 'family resemblances'. The 'repetition' here has to do, I think, with trying and (importantly)
failing to 'see' the (apparently hidden) 'essence' of language. It's a kind of repetition compulsion, in the Freudian sense of repeating failure in order to try and 'work through' it:
§113: “But this is how it is ---- ” I say to myself over and over again
§114: "That is the kind of proposition one repeats to oneself countless times. One thinks that one is tracing nature over and over again..."
§115: "language seemed only to repeat it to us inexorably."
So the key conceptual link - as I understand it - is that between uniqueness (or 'remarkableness') and repetition, and how the illusion of the former gives rise to the fixation of the later. It might be said that 'philosophy', for Witty, just is a pathological repetition compulsion in the psychoanalytic sense. Another important connection that begins to be linked here is that between uniqueness and 'generality': although Witty has invoked (critically) the notion of generality before (esp. the 'general form of the proposition' - cf. §65, §74, §104). Also interesting - and significant - that Witty primarily employs perceptual and specifically visual metaphors (something
@fdrake already pointed out):
§113: "If only I could fix my gaze absolutely sharply on this fact and get it into focus".
§115: "A picture held us captive". ; Note the connection with earlier sections:
§90: "We feel as if we had to see right into phenomena"
Can't yet expound on
why this insistence of visuality and pictures is important, other than to simply make note of it at this point.