Are we trying to understand early Witt's idea (good, bad, or ugly) QUA early Witt, or understand his ideas as they were critiqued by later Witt? — schopenhauer1
He doesn't. Objects are demanded by the nature of language. — Banno
1.1 The world is the totality of facts, not of things.
Not an apt wording. Atomic facts are not constituted from things; rather things are constituted by their relations to each other....broken... — schopenhauer1
Not an apt wording. Atomic facts are not constituted from things; rather things are constituted by their relations to each other. — Banno
2.0141 The possibility of its occurring in states of affairs is the form of an object.
...objects can only exist within states of affairs and that the world is made up of states of affairs and not of objects. Objects do not exist as the basic building blocks of reality, but rather are given being only in the context of states of affairs...
Wittgenstein never gives us an example of an object because there is nothing to be said about objects. Asking "what is an object?" is like asking "what does everything have in common?" The best answer Wittgenstein can muster to this question is that everything shares in common a logical form that allows it to occur in states of affairs. Objects are the simplest, most general things there are: the only thing that all things hold in common is that we can say something about them.
Why start by ASSUMING objects? — schopenhauer1
This notion of a "private, subjective experience" permeates your writing. It is not used in the Tractatus. — Banno
So you are not here setting out the tractatus in its own terms — Banno
language is inherently public.............Language is not moving information from one head to another. — Banno
any thought can be put into propositional form. — Banno
the word "red" has a public and not a private use. — Banno
Why, indeed, must there be a something to which "red" refers? — Banno
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. — Banno
Would you care to address Bradley's regress? As i said, I do not understand the argument. Since you rely on it, perhaps you might explain it. — Banno
A thought is expressed in language. This does not mean that a thought is language. The expression, language, is not what is expressed, the thought. — Fooloso4
Kant's belief was Scientific Realism rather than mysticism. — RussellA
The Schopenhauer and Kierkegaard connection makes that seem fairly likely. — Tate
Reading Schopenhauer left me pondering the limits of the intellect, at how some intellectual avenues seem to be dead ends. This is a theme I'm picking back up in the Tractacus. — Tate
Wittgenstein wrote in his Notebooks 1914-16: "Now it is becoming clear why I thought that thinking and language were the same. For thinking is a kind of language." — RussellA
For a thought too is, of course, a logical picture of the proposition, and therefore it just is a kind of proposition. — Notebooks 1914-16, p.82
The proposition in picture-writing ... [7]
The proposition onfy says something in so far as it is a picture! [8]
A situation is thinkable' ('imaginable') means: We can make ourselves a picture of it. [24] — Notebooks
Musical themes are in a certain sense propositions. [40] — Notebooks
1 The world is all that is the case.
6.53 The correct method in philosophy would really be the following: to say nothing except
what can be said, i.e. propositions of natural science—i.e. something that has nothing to do
with philosophy—and then, whenever someone else wanted to say something metaphysical, to demonstrate to him that he had failed to give a meaning to certain signs in his propositions.
Philosophy is not a body of doctrine but an activity.
Philosophy does not result in ‘philosophical propositions’
6.5 If a question can be framed at all, it is also possible to answer it.
When the answer cannot be put into words, neither can the question be put into words.
The riddle does not exist.
6.44 It is not how things are in the world that is mystical, but that it exists.
6.522 There are, indeed, things that cannot be put into words. They make themselves manifest.
They are what is mystical.
The whole sense of the book might be summed up in the following words: what can be said at all can be said clearly, and what we cannot talk about we must pass over in silence.
Those who support a resolute reading. — Fooloso4
I was trying to get the word back into ordinary language, reinforcing the distinction between the public and the private, between the subjective and the objective, and between the unthinking experience rather than cognitive intellect. — RussellA
I agree that language can only evolve within a group of people, and so is inherently public. — RussellA
if language isn't about moving information from my head into the Barista's head, then what is language for. — RussellA
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