• Paine
    3k
    That is, do you agree with W that it is a mistake to look for the use of a sign as though it were an object co-existing with the sign. Again, since the word "occult" doesn't occur in the quoted passage, I'm not clear how it establishes how W uses it.Ludwig V

    I am not sure that I agree but accept that such a judgement is critical to Wittgenstein's enterprise.

    "Occult" appears in the preceding paragraph:

    But if we had to name anything which is the life of the sign, we should have to say that it was its use.

    If the meaning of the sign (roughly, that which is of importance about the sign) is an image built up in our minds when we see or hear the sign, then first let us adopt the method we just described of replacing this mental image by seeing some sort of outward object, e.g. a painted or modelled image. Then why should the written sign plus this painted image be alive if the written sign alone was dead? – In fact, as soon as you think of replacing the mental image by, say, a painted one, and as soon as the image thereby loses its occult character, it ceases to seem to impart any life to the sentence at all. (It was in fact just the occult character of the mental process which you needed for your purposes.)
    BB, page 9

    The comment: (One of the reasons for this mistake is again that we are looking for a “thing corresponding to a substantive.”) is developed further at page 11, 48, and 72.

    The "occult" is what Wittgenstein is militating against. Note the use of "us" in the following:

    The sign (the sentence) gets its significance from the system of signs, from the language to which it belongs. Roughly: understanding a sentence means understanding a language.

    As a part of the system of language, one may say “the sentence has life”. But one is tempted to imagine that which gives the sentence life as something in an occult sphere, accompanying the sentence. But whatever would accompany it would for us just be another sign.
    ibid. page 9

    In the penultimate paragraph of the book there is the following:

    Let’s not imagine the meaning as an occult connection the mind makes between a word and a thing, and that this connection contains the whole usage of a word as the seed might be said to contain the tree.ibid. page 110

    I will ponder how to express my comments regarding Kant more cogently.
  • Antony Nickles
    1.3k
    @Ludwig V

    In considering the solipsist, I think it is important to keep the "realist" and "idealist" within shooting range.Paine

    Interesting point. I did class them all to be reactions to skepticism, but each are different, so, worth a look. And I’m trying to wrap my head around Kant as the one looking for something stable, which is not us, thus the “object” but then which cannot be the “real” object, and the gymnastics start.

    I think Wittgenstein understands motives as he understands meaning in generalJoshs

    But motives have their own logic (p.15), here compared to causes vs reasons.

    Our interests are enacted in situations,Joshs

    I am talking about the interests/desires (and feelings, as reasons) of the skeptic, but that is also a possibility in every one of us (including Witt), and so the “situation” is our situation as humans (the human condition). (I also refer to the interests of our culture, imbedded in the criteria for judgment that hold what matters to a certain practice.)

    You seem to want to argue that the picture causes the “disquiet”, which is not what I am talking about. Anyway, the skeptic is “cramped” by the forced analogy (the two senses), from which he creates the picture, but this doesn’t explain why first choose “objects” to analogize, which is the matter at hand. And you’ve given no textual evidence for putting things back to front as you have done—I need more to see the logic. I take Heidegger to be dismissing urges as a cause “a push”; but what I am discussing is exactly the “motive” of the skeptic, what they want/desire (to stand before them), which is the object, the objectivity. Yes, I am conjecturing/hypothesizing fear, but as a “reason”, which is not a cause or catalyst. The force that they can’t avoid is that of the analogy once they choose objects as a framework. As I said Witt deals with these terms in the passage on p.15, quoted above by @Paine.
  • Antony Nickles
    1.3k
    @Paine

    What I'm fishing for is a distinction between what explanations we can expect from philosophy and what belongs to a different, less intellectual, mode of explanation.Ludwig V

    And don't we see here the possibility of the characterization and placement of philosophy (reason) in relation to “emotion” as mentioned here? And if we/philosophy is to decide why the skeptic does what he does, isn’t that philosophical? it is, categorically, looking for a “reason” (see above), must it be a certain form of “rationale” to be intellectually, logically valid? Can we not say/hypothesize that Descartes is "worried" by his being wrong? and ask why he pictures it as sleep? what it is that he wants in answering that worry the way he does?

    One distinction I'm looking at is precisely that difference between something we can attribute to anyone who holds that view and something that may vary from one person to anotherLudwig V

    Me too, as I also mention to @Joshs, but the categorization that it is personal (individual or has to do with the two people arguing) is one of the imposed rationale for forcibly distinguishing “reason” (as defined/defended) from what is lumped together as “emotion” (left to persuasion). Also the charge that this is meant to point out a “flaw” as if one were judging philosophy only by “good” or “bad”, and not anything specific, rigorous, detailed, in-depth, accountable, intelligible.

    What we want (!) is a way to dismiss, set aside, reject the doctrine - isn't it?Ludwig V

    I would think we would agree that part of Witt's method or aim here is to get at why in a way that is still analytical/logical (I think I will claim that that is the start and goal of the PI). Circling back, I think we may have to admit that in showing other options/logic, there is no force to Witt's "argument", particularly given the skeptic's "opinion", which I might tentatively posit as the force of conviction (though not of a "belief", but perhaps a decision or choice they nevertheless hold strongly), though I would take this up later after a think.

    And my response here is meant as elucidation of the historical mistake I am pointing out and not by way of accusation or that I see us as in argument.
  • Antony Nickles
    1.3k
    @Joshs @Paine @Ludwig V

    Although we may have responses yet to Sec 18, and I do see the subsequent conversations as relevant and interesting and necessary, particularly the discussion of "why" (and "opinion") in Sec 17--which appears to be our driving theme here and which more than likely will continue in the next sections (which may shed some light)--I’m afraid I've hoisted myself on my own petard (in digressing into "reason v. emotion", though that may be relevant in concluding--lo! the hypocrisy), so I'm going to pause in responding to get through the last couple parts. Not to suppress discussion but just to explain I'll be stepping out for the time being. Again, anyone else is free to lead the charge as it may take me some time.
  • Paine
    3k
    I am talking about the interests/desires (and feelings, as reasons) of the skeptic, but that is also a possibility in every one of us (including Witt), and so the “situation” is our situation as humans (the human condition).Antony Nickles

    I understand that you are concentrating on your writing now so I will wait as long as you like to respond or not, but I am compelled to say this now:

    I don't follow your framing of Wittgenstein primarily intending to quell the qualms of the skeptic. What W is putting forth is provocative and has pissed a lot of people off.

    The primary reason W puts forth for the "mistakes" he has outlined is the "craving for generality." He plasters the wall with Plato as the poster child for this desire. That is not to say that he "refutes" Plato.

    The 'human condition' is the only game in town but is difficult to locate. As Wittgenstein has said elsewhere, he does not want to make that easier for anyone.
  • Joshs
    6.5k


    the skeptic is “cramped” by the forced analogy (the two senses), from which he creates the picture, but this doesn’t explain why first choose “objects” to analogize, which is the matter at hand. And you’ve given no textual evidence for putting things back to front as you have done—I need more to see the logic.Antony Nickles

    While Wittgenstein does use "wants" and "dissatisfaction," the therapeutic effect of his philosophy, the complete dissolution of the problem once the grammar is clarified, shows that the confusion is linguistic. If the cause were a deep-seated fear, simply showing the proper use of 'know' wouldn't eliminate the fear. It eliminates the problem, thus proving the problem was linguistic, not psychological.
    It is as the sense-making of grammatical use that meaning shows up as how things matter to us. This mattering can be described as a logic of sense or a logic of affect-feeling-emotion. What is important is that we not try to fix such terms categorically. Anything that we might be tempted to place within the category of ‘affect’ , such as mood, feeling, desire, emotion or motive, has its existence only in how it works within the mattering of word use.

    Shared interests and desires that give rise to reasons are the raw material of sense-making, and it is when the grammar becomes misleading that our interests become the fuel for illusion and intellectual disquiet. For instance, it’s not the interest in securing certainty which produces illusion, it’s when their interest is capture by a misleading picture that ‘desire for certainty ‘ miscarries.
  • Paine
    3k
    If the cause were a deep-seated fear, simply showing the proper use of 'know' wouldn't eliminate the fear. It eliminates the problem, thus proving the problem was linguistic, not psychological.Joshs

    This is confusing. I understand why someone would not be satisfied by a correction of speech.

    In the context of this book, however, the problems of the "linguistic" are taken to be separate and logically prior to the problems of psychology.

    That seems to me to be a push against explanation. The different bits keep getting further apart.
  • Antony Nickles
    1.3k
    Alright $#$%!!, I am a hypocrite (apologies again to @Paine); just one more (hit off the pipe) and then back to the grindstone (and by that I mean the book, not my job; obviously).

    "Chose" may not be quite the right word in some cases.Ludwig V

    Touche. "Chose" is a mis-categorization. I think I'm only pointing out that there is something leading up to an "object" being the analogy (that something comes before that, as I argue to @Joshs above)

    I've come to the conclusion that the solipsist has a pointLudwig V

    I agree that there is something there as well, and maybe even addressed here, but if not, definitely in the PI; here I take it as obvious he is continuing to try to learn about/investigate the skeptic. I would claim the aim is this "why?" rather than refuting or dismissing them, but at least before those or not just those.

    But this finding out is not the kind of finding out you are doing when you ask people why they are adopting a philosophical position. In philosophy, we are looking for arguments, not expressions of personal preference.Ludwig V

    But isn't this: "looking for arguments" connected/related to the skeptic turning a "muddle" into a "problem" (that they can "answer", perhaps with a certain knowledge)? and isn't this part of why "arguing" with the skeptic doesn't seem as if it would be effective? and why we are still searching for a fulcrum that changes their mind? It interests me to think of the skeptic's expressions as a "preference", as in a desire. And then: how "personal"? (not individual, but not a "position"--an "opinion"? @Paine).

    But I'm not sure that those mundane activities which we barely notice could not be picked out as experiences under some circumstances.Ludwig V

    My descriptions (of thought and experience) are of course not in the text nor meant "empirically", but merely--in attempting Witt's method--as simplified examples of another version/usage (of experience) to proffer a logic/grammar that would be another option to the skeptic's "logic" (but not "the" logic), i.e., this discussion of "experience" is not to "argue" with the skeptic (or anyone) in order to decide on the "right" version--as if only one, requiring that we resolve all versions with each other.

    Accordingly, in this example of "experience", I am admittedly pointing out perhaps only one among other senses or usages (than the skeptic's) that would have other logic. I brought up this example to highlight (make explicit) what I see as what follows from the skeptic's picture of experience as a mental mechanism; that it is: ever-present, and that it is: of everything.

    Your point is well taken that there is a sense of "experiencing" as awareness of, or attention to, something (even that awareness and attention are regular mental processes). Maybe it’s: being alive to the little things, even, just nothing (no "thing"?) But even that version would I think accede that one can't be mindful/attentive/aware all the time (which @T Clark might speak to) which I take is the logic that follows from the skeptic's picture of experience as a "mental mechanism".

    So to say there is a logic to experience that is outside the norm of occurrences (like an uneventful shopping trip), might be just another version/sense/usage of "experience" that doesn't preclude (contradict/relate to) the logic that experience is an event (not always there, as we appear to agree on). And we might even agree that if you are "experiencing" the mundane/an everyday occurrence, you are doing so "outside" of a norm (of being distracted), maybe even being outside your (normal) self (the ego).

    So maybe mine is just another usage on the same branch, just: coming from the "external" ("forced" upon us, as we might put it); an "experience" as a thing in response to which we would say "Well! that was quite an experience!". And that is not to say that it cannot still depend on the individual (their "internal"; their “experience” as their history, exposure, etc.); for instance: a white person may judge an event of racism as an "experience", to which a person of color might say "Welcome to my world [of everyday occurrences that I don't even notice anymore (or try to suppress)]".

    And maybe this is what the (start of the) work philosophy can do looks like, when back on rough ground.

    (**Digression: I take fighting over exactly what is, or how we justify, rule following or pointing or experience (Witt will talk about this as what leads to it being seen as a "scientific" disagreement) to be the single biggest misunderstanding of Witt that stops people from even getting started.

    I think we would all agree at this point that these are examples to show there are alternatives to the skeptic's singular, forced "logic". They are meant to be premises so simple that everyone would agree to them, but in the sense of "accept" them as (see them as): having a logic at all. But even getting to where we have described criteria (for one usage in a particular situation) that we accept as "logical", is not the "conclusion", say, the "right" logic in response to the skeptic's "wrong" one, and, particularly, not to satisfy what the skeptic wants (still an open question). I take Witt's investigation (further than Austin's--here I seek confirmation @Banno) to become aware of the unexamined (by reflection, explication) in order to know/see one's self (here, one's skeptic), etc., to be able, finally, to ask: why am I (the skeptic) doing this? and then: what do we really, freely, want? (what is my "real need"?) (PI #108) -- a discussion for later I think.)
  • Antony Nickles
    1.3k
    @Joshs @Paine @Ludwig V

    Section 19 - p. 66-69 uhhhh… what?
156789Next
bold
italic
underline
strike
code
quote
ulist
image
url
mention
reveal
youtube
tweet
Add a Comment

Welcome to The Philosophy Forum!

Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.