He gives no meaning to "transcendental", so anyone can explain it how he sees fit. — Pussycat
It doesn't mean it exists either. Or that the ethical that has been transcended has anything to do with what is obtained at the end of this transcendence, it might be something completely different. — Pussycat
So he says that the mystical shows itself, not the ethical. — Pussycat
Wittgenstein does not say and it does not follow from anything he does say that the ethical has been transcended. It is just the opposite, the ethical transcends the facts of the world. (6.41) — Fooloso4
But when he writes that: "he who understands me finally recognizes them as senseless, when he has climbed out through them, on them, over them. (He must so to speak throw away the ladder, after he has climbed up on it.) He must surmount these propositions; then he sees the world rightly". This surmount, climb through, on and over these (nonsensical and ethical) propositions, isn't that transcendence? — Pussycat
But what happens to ethics afterwards? — Pussycat
Living in agreement with the world is living in accord with one’s conscience, which is the voice of God.
I am then, so to speak, in agreement with that alien will on which I appear dependent. That is to say: “I am doing the will of God” (NB 8.7.16) — NB
Do you mean ethics in the sense of rules or standards of proper conduct? If so, Wittgenstein says nothing about this — Fooloso4
The closest he gets in the comment in the Notebooks about conscience quoted in an earlier post: — Fooloso4
My whole tendency and, I believe, the tendency of all men who ever tried to write or talk Ethics or Religion was to run against the boundaries of language.
No, I meant ethics as the transcendental: if it was employed as a means to see the world aright, then what is its use after this? — Pussycat
I think he uses this as a simile like he says so in the lecture: when someone is happy then he says and feels as if he is with God or in heaven, where being with God and heaven mean something pleasant. — Pussycat
It is not like sightseeing. It is not a once and done experience. — Fooloso4
It is an attempt to put into words what cannot be put into words. When he says "ultimate value", however, it suggests something much more profound and important than something pleasant. When he says that he is "so to speak" in agreement with the will of God, again I think he means something far more profound and significant than something pleasant. When he says that his conscience is the voice of God, he is not stating a matter of fact. To attempt to ascribe a more specific meaning to it is antithetical to the Tractatus. — Fooloso4
If for instance in our world-book we read the description of a murder with all its details physical and psychological, the mere description of these facts will contain nothing which we could call an ethical proposition. The murder will be on exactly the same level as any other event, for instance the falling of a stone. Certainly the reading of description might cause us pain or rage or any other emotion, or we might read about the pain or rage caused by this murder in other people when they have heard of it, but there will simply be facts, facts, and facts but no Ethics.
I mean, a normal person I think would have said that the murder was quite unethical and immoral, and denote the murderer as unethical and immoral too. But not Wittgenstein, he only sees facts. — Pussycat
and no meaning either; ie the condition for meaning and value is the same. Is that what you are saying? — Pussycat
And as to happiness, do you think that Wittgenstein is saying that whoever surmounts these ethical propositions and sees the world aright, will be happy? Because if so, then how do you explain the fact that he led a most unhappy life himself? — Pussycat
We need to make a distinction between meaning as Sinn or sense and meaning as significant or of value. — Fooloso4
Happiness is said to be a reward for the good exercise of the will (6.43) — Fooloso4
We need to make a distinction between meaning as Sinn or sense and meaning as significant or of value.
— Fooloso4
Alright, can you bring an example that clearly shows this distinction? — Pussycat
4.022
A proposition shows its sense.
A proposition shows how things stand if it is true. And it says that they do so stand.
4.031
Instead of, ‘This proposition has such and such a sense’, we can simply say, ‘This proposition represents such and such a situation’.
6.41
The sense of the world must lie outside the world.
So if that is the case, combined with the fact that W. was not happy in his life, we can safely infer that he did not exercise his will in a good way, and thus he was not rewarded, right? — Pussycat
The same distinction in use can be found with Bedeutung. In English we also use the term 'meaning' in different ways. — Fooloso4
So I see here W argue in favour of amorality, just like Nietzsche, the opinion that ethics is non-existent, in thinking or in saying, in this world or beyond.
— Pussycat
Here you betray your lack of understanding not only of Wittgenstein but of Nietzsche as well. What they have in common is the fundamental importance of value and meaning for life. They differ, however, in where that is to be found. For Nietzsche it is the revaluation of values. — Fooloso4
If Wittgenstein was correct in claiming that happiness is the reward for the good exercise of the will and it was true that he was not happy, then that seems to be a correct conclusion. If you read Monk's biography and well as comments made by Wittgenstein in Culture and Value and elsewhere it is clear that he sometimes is critical of his actions. See also his comments about confession. — Fooloso4
It is quite clear that there is ethical experience. One knows what it is, according to W., to be a happy man. One knows what it is to be in agreement with the world, with one's conscience, the will of God. One knows what it is for life to have value and meaning. One knows what it is to live in the eternal present. One knows the mystical (it makes itself manifest). One know how to see the world aright and what it is to see the world aright. One knows how all things stand, how it is all related, that is, God. — Fooloso4
Something that someone just knows but cannot put into words? — Pussycat
I am asking, because it looked like a sermon to me, and I wouldn't take Wittgenstein to be a preacher. — Pussycat
Well for one I very much doubt that all the above are things that one knows. — Pussycat
So you agree that it was your own sermon? — Pussycat
... relating happiness to God or some divine providence, but this is not to be taken literally — Pussycat
Just as Copleston says that the objective/transcendent object and cause of religious/mystical experience is God — Pussycat
You can call it my own sermon if you like, but they are all things that Wittgenstein says, all things that were referenced. As to why you think calling it a sermon serves any purpose, I will leave to you. And as to why you drag Copleston into this I will also leave to you. — Fooloso4
Wittgenstein would not agree. He does not regard God as an object, objective/transcendent or otherwise. — Fooloso4
Whether God is that transcendent/objective object or otherwise, he (Copleston) certainly attributes religious/mystical experience to God, one way or another. Whereas, in your reading of the Tractatus, this mystical/ethical/religious experience is attributed to ethics. But then again, you seem to link ethics to God as in the sermon above, so essentially, these two different views are the same. — Pussycat
In tractarian terms, their form is the same, but their content is different. — Pussycat
Whereas, in your reading of the Tractatus, this mystical/ethical/religious experience is attributed to ethics. — Pussycat
... hypotheses is that there is actually some objective cause of that experience.
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