• Shawn
    13.2k
    What do you think Wittgenstein would have said about the field of axiology in philosophy nowadays?

    As expressed in the following quote from this essay, how would Wittgenstein respond to it?

    A. C. Grayling

    “If it were true that value somehow just ‘manifested itself’, it would be puzzling why conflicts and disagreements should arise over ethical questions, or why people can passionately and sincerely hold views which are quite opposite to those held with equal passion and sincerity by others.”
    – Wittgenstein: A Very Short Introduction

    If the early Wittgenstein of the Tractatus would say, that they (values) are mystical, what would the Wittgenstein of the Philosophical Investigations say about them?
  • Antony Nickles
    1.1k
    The philosophical realization is that our lives involve what interests us, what matters to us, what our justifications look like, what obligations we have, how we judge, are accused, make excuses, etc. What careens us from "objective" to "subjective" is the fear of the fact that there is nothing stopping us from disagreeing about moral issues. Wittgenstein threads the needle with a few things. One being the solidity of us all being human, our culture, our language, etc., which people could intellectually pick apart if it were a moral theory, but Witt shows that every little thing (say, that I listed) has its own criteria, own ways of being rational; and, because of that variety and specificity, if and when we disagree, there is some mutual history to extend from (not manifest from thin air) and we have ways of working out our differences (which may be personal, but rarely secret--apart from anyone). Finally, that when we express ourselves, or judge the other, we are doing it, each separately, we are responsible, we define ourselves in that act, we are answerable, we stand for something. So we may end up disagreeing, but we at least have the ability to develop what our rationale are and what our position will mean for who we will be in saying it, and thus we have the possibility to respect the other for taking their position even though we disagree.
  • TheMadFool
    13.8k
    Wittgenstein would've said, "It's not that there is no such thing as value, it's just that "value" means different things to different people"

    Axiology is about the referent of "value" and Wittgensteinianism is about the word "value". :joke:
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