You have to read the whole thing to get it. This book is a demonstration of philosophical nonsense. For a purpose. — Tate
The book's point is an ethical one. I once meant to include in the preface a sentence which is not in fact there now but which I will write out for you here, because it will perhaps be a key to the work for you. What I meant to write, then, was this: My work consists of two parts: the one presented here plus all that I have not written. And it is precisely this second part that is the important one. My book draws limits to the sphere of the ethical from the inside as it were, and I am convinced that this is the ONLY rigorous way of drawing those limits. In short, I believe that where many others today are just gassing. I have managed in my book to put everything firmly in place by being silent about it. And for that reason, unless I am very much mistaken, the book will say a great deal that you yourself want to say. Only perhaps you won't see that it is said in the book. For now, I would recommend you to read the preface and the conclusion, because they contain the most direct expression of the point of the book.
Reading Schopenhauer would prime you to get it, though. It's similar stuff. — Tate
Whereas my interest is in showing that things which look the same are really different. I was thinking of using as a motto for my book a quotation from King Lear: ‘I’ll show you differences.’
If you think Harry Jaffa is hard to argue with, try agreeing with him.
. I don’t think he wrote it to show what nonsense looks like. — schopenhauer1
I climbed it. I got it. It's not really that complicated. — Tate
I'm going off the SEP article right now. I'm reading the text as well. — Tate
This sounds incredibly arrogant. — Tate
The Tractatus is notorious for its interpretative difficulties. In the decades that have passed since its publication it has gone through several waves of general interpretations.
The Tractatus is wrong if it fails to prove the very foundation it stands on. — schopenhauer1
Jackson wrongly attributed the phrase to Aristotle, and seems to have misunderstood the use of the aphorism. But this quote on the notion of truth is apt to our discussion here. Or we might consider Ryle's example of a new student shown the faulty buildings, library, Chancellery and so on, asking "but where is the University?"...nothing can be proven to an extreme skeptic who will not acknowledge what is before you. — Jackson
4.1212 What can be shown, cannot be said.
4.126 ...(A name shows that it signifies an object, a sign for a number that it signifies a number, etc.)
So it’s one long troll? — schopenhauer1
It is not as Wittgenstein said that propositions show the logical form of reality, rather propositions represent private subjective experiences, and it is these private subjective experiences that show the logical form of reality. — RussellA
FH Bradley
Famously, Bradley brought a vicious regress argument against external relations. In his original version of 1893, Bradley presented a dilemma to show that external relations are unintelligible: either a relation R is nothing to the things a and b it relates, in which case it cannot relate them. Or, it is something to them, in which case R must be related to them. — RussellA
Of course for Wittgenstein, if we construe the grammar of sensation as object and designation, then the object - the "private subjective experience"-drops out or consideration. — Banno
Wittgenstein in Tractatus proposed that thought is language
4 "The thought is the significant proposition". — RussellA
Thus the aim of the book is to draw a limit to thought, or rather—not to thought, but to the expression of thoughts ... It will therefore only be in language that the limit can be drawn ...
3.1 In a proposition a thought finds an expression that can be perceived by the senses.
Thought is linguistic for Wittgenstein. — Tate
This is not Kant. There is no a priori knowledge. It's all just a world put together with the same logic that is the backbone of language. — Tate
3.1431 The essence of a propositional sign is very clearly seen if we imagine one composed of spatial objects (such as tables, chairs, and books) instead of written signs.
Then the spatial arrangement of these things will express the sense of the proposition.
Not exactly. He's making fun of Schopenhauer in some respects: the stuff about the subject being the limit of the world.
You should be laughing at the end. It's awesome. — Tate
Critique of Pure Reason - A239 - "We can only cognize objects that we can, in principle, intuit. Consequently, we can only cognize objects in space and time, appearances. We cannot cognize things in themselves." — RussellA
Clearly you think there is something philosophically appealing about this that separates it out from other "fictions". — schopenhauer1
Yes. I'm not sure why Wittgenstein bugs you. If you're a Schopenhauer/Tolstoy/Kierkegaard fan, it seems to me you'd at least be curious about what's going on with the Tractacus. — Tate
The proposition "Rembrandt is a painter" is a description of Rembrandt as a painter. By seeing a picture of a Rembrandt painting, which is isomorphic with the person Rembrandt, we gain an acquaintance with Rembrandt. — RussellA
If it is true as Wittgenstein proposes that thought is language, the thought of the private subjective experience the postbox is red is also the proposition "the postbox is red". — RussellA
Doesn't look right, since we have, as you note,The proposition "the postbox is red" is linked to my thought that the postbox is red. — RussellA
My bolding. It's not a link, but an equivalence.4 A thought is a proposition with a sense.
But that is not correct. Red and the thought of red are different things. If red is the thought of red then when you and I talk about the red sunset you would be talking about your thought-of-red and I about my thought-of-red, and so quite literally we would not be talking about different things. But I put it to you that we would be talking about the very same sunset and hence that the word "red" has a public and not a private use.The word "red" represents the thought red — RussellA
But it is not clear here what "isomorphic" is doing here. It can't mean that all thoughts are true; "the post box is blue" is not isomorphic in that way with red post boxes. Yet the components, "is blue' and "the postbox", while they might be part of a thought, do not form a thought, a proposition, until brought together.I have argued that whilst language may represent some thoughts, all thoughts are isomorphic with reality. — RussellA
hy should it not just be that we use the word in this way? Why, indeed, must there be a something to which "red" refers? Not all words are nouns. — Banno
but is it appropriate to use later Witt here to give exegesis on Tractatus — schopenhauer1
Why start by ASSUMING objects? — schopenhauer1
2.021 Objects make up the substance of the world. That is why they cannot be composite.
2.0211 If they world had no substance, then whether a proposition had sense would depend on whether another proposition was true.
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