Witt does seem to disregard his own statements, and say quite a bit about what shouldn't be said...but, that's because this isn't the agenda of the work, despite discussing many relevant positivist ideas, and problems. — 013zen
The essential business of language is to assert or deny facts. Given the syntax of language, the meaning of a sentence is determined as soon as the meaning of the component words is known. In order that a certain sentence should assert a certain fact there must, however the language may be constructed, be something in common between the structure of the sentence and the structure of the fact. This is perhaps the most fundamental thesis of Mr. Wittgenstein’s theory. That which has to be in common between the sentence and the fact cannot, he contends, be itself in turn said in language. It can, in his phraseology, only be shown, not said, for whatever we may say will still need to have the same structure. — ibid.
I hope this helps. — 013zen
(4.021)A proposition is a picture of reality.
From that perspective, Witt does seem to disregard his own statements, and say quite a bit about what shouldn't be said... — 013zen
(6.42)So too it is impossible for there to be propositions of ethics. Propositions can express nothing that is higher.
It doesn't. You make a distinction between the world as pictures in the mind and reality not being pictures in the mind. — Fooloso4
What do you find in the text regarding pictures that is true of the world but not true of reality? — Fooloso4
Wheren does he make a distinction between the pictures of the world being in the mind and pictures of reality not being in the mind? — Fooloso4
Would you say Wittgenstein was attempting to bridge the gap between the disciplines of science and philosophy? — DifferentiatingEgg
They say nothing about the world. Treating them the way we treat propositions leads only to confusion and fallacy. This does not mean that ethics and aesthetics and unimportant, but that they are so important that we should not regard them as something other than they are. — Fooloso4
↪013zen Sure, sounds like Wittgenstein's approach is more of a style of Marriage between Science and Philosophy, where as Russell and the others were more of trying to make a baby out of Science and Philosophy? — DifferentiatingEgg
Logical space is like the the common playing field of thoughts, without being tied to any individual instance of thought. — 013zen
The only commonality between pictures which compose the world, and reality, is the logical form of the picture and the state of affairs it is a picture of. — 013zen
The world is made up of pictures — 013zen
(1.1)The world is the totality of facts, not of things.
The world, is a possible picture of reality. — 013zen
(1)The world is all that is the case.
There are not "pictures of the world" and "pictures of reality", with one being in the mind and the other not. — 013zen
There is a distinction being made between reality and the world. The world is made up of pictures in our mind; reality is not made up of pictures and certainly not pictures in our mind. — 013zen
The pictures do not compose the world. The world is not a collection or arrangement of pictures. The pictures of the world are pictures of reality made possible by the logical structure underlying both the picture and the world, that is, the picture and reality. — Fooloso4
The world is not made up of pictures. Nowhere does Wittgenstein say this. — Fooloso4
There are not "pictures of the world" and "pictures of reality", with one being in the mind and the other not.
— 013zen
Isn't that what you said?
There is a distinction being made between reality and the world. The world is made up of pictures in our mind; reality is not made up of pictures and certainly not pictures in our mind.
— 013zen — Fooloso4
The latter presents facts in logical space, and thereby constitute the world. — 013zen
Which distinction? — 013zen
Between the world as pictures in the mind and reality as not made up of pictures in our mind. — Fooloso4
There is a distinction being made between reality and the world. The world is made up of pictures in our mind; reality is not made up of pictures and certainly not pictures in our mind. — 013zen
(4.021)A proposition is a picture of reality.
What do you mean by constitute? — Fooloso4
The world is not made up of pictures. — Fooloso4
What else could I possibly mean by constitute? — 013zen
You just disagree. — 013zen
So, the facts in logical space that make up the world are presented in logical space by pictures. — 013zen
A fact, can only "exist" in logical space and present the world insofar as it is a picture. — 013zen
I do disagree, but gave you a chance to clarify what you meant. — Fooloso4
What is presented "by" pictures are not the facts themselves that are presented in the picture. The picture re-presents what is pictured. It is an image of it. — Fooloso4
“We make to ourselves pictures of facts” (2.1).
“The picture presents the facts in logical space” (2.11)
So, here there is a distinction being made between “facts” and “pictures of facts”. — 013zen
Your use of the term 'presented' is ambiguous. — Fooloso4
If you read the comment, I am only using the term insofar as I am quoting the text wherein Witt uses the expression "presented" here:
"The picture presents the facts in logical space" (2.11) — 013zen
The world is made up of pictures in our mind ... — 013zen
A fact, can only "exist" in logical space and present the world insofar as it is a picture. — 013zen
... we need to somehow make sense of the fact that:
1. Fact in logical space make up the world
2. Facts are presented in logical space by pictures — 013zen
An exhaustive collection of all the facts re-presented in logical space, as pictures, form the world. — 013zen
That suggests you agree with Russell in a way that I do not. Russell says:
— Paine
I apologize, I must have been unclear in my writing. I was trying to say that, from Russell's perspective, such seems to be the case. I do not agree with Russell on this point. — 013zen
Witt does seem to disregard his own statements, and say quite a bit about what shouldn't be said...but, that's because this isn't the agenda of the work, despite discussing many relevant positivist ideas, and problems. — 013zen
That which has to be in common between the sentence and the fact cannot, he contends, be itself in turn said in language. It can, in his phraseology, only be shown, not said, for whatever we may say will still need to have the same structure. — ibid. emphasis mine
2.151. What constitutes a picture is that its elements are related to one another in a determinate way.
2.141. A picture is a fact.
2.151. Pictorial form is the possibility that things are related to one another in the same way as the elements of the picture.
2.1511. That is how a picture is attached to reality; it reaches right out to it.
2.172. A picture cannot, however, depict its pictorial form: it displays it. — ibid.
4.0312. The possibility of propositions is based on the principle that objects have signs as their representatives.
My fundamental idea is that the ‘logical constants’ are not representatives; that there can be no representatives of the logic of facts. — ibid.
4.12. Propositions can represent the whole of reality, but they cannot represent what they must have in common with reality in order to be able to represent it—logical form.
In order to be able to represent logical form, we should have to be able to station ourselves with propositions somewhere outside logic, that is to say outside the world. — ibid.
4.121. Propositions cannot represent logical form: it is mirrored in them.
What finds its reflection in language, language cannot represent.
What expresses itself in language, we cannot express by means of language.
Propositions show the logical form of reality.
They display it. — ibid.
Wittgenstein does not say that the picture that presents the facts is something in the mind. — Fooloso4
3.1. In a proposition a thought finds an expression that can be perceived by the senses. — ibid.
I would go further and say that Wittgenstein is opposed to the framework of things in themselves versus things for us. — Paine
This no doubt also explains why there are two possible ways of seeing the figure as a cube; and all similar phenomena. For we really see two different facts.
a) Wittgenstein does not say that the picture that presents the facts is something in the mind — Fooloso4
b) A fact does not present the world. The picture presents the facts. — Fooloso4
The space in which it occurs is logical space. — Fooloso4
1. Wittgenstein is making a distinction between facts and things or objects. The world is all that is the case. Facts and not things determine what is and is not the case. That a thing can exist in a state of affairs is not accidental. The possibility of it occurring in states of affairs is necessary. This necessity is logical necessity. — Fooloso4
"That a thing can exist in a state of affairs is not accidental. The possibility of it occurring in states of affairs is necessary. This necessity is logical necessity" — Fooloso4
2. Facts - not in logical space — 013zen
(1.13)The facts in logical space are the world.
2. The existence of a fact means the existence of an atomic fact. — 013zen
What is the case—a fact—is the existence of states of affairs.(2)
This is important. Reality, is the existence and non-existence of atomic facts, while the world is only the existence of an atomic fact. — 013zen
The world is determined by the facts, and by these being all the facts. (1.11)
For the totality of facts determines both what is the case, and also all that is not the case. (1.12)
The sum-total of reality is the world. (2.063)
All facts are in logical space. — Fooloso4
Logic underlies and makes possible both fact and pictures or representation of facts. — Fooloso4
'Atomic fact' is an infelicitous translation from the Ogden translation.
The Pears/McGuinness has:
What is the case—a fact—is the existence of states of affairs.(2)
In German "das Bestehen von Sachverhalten".
The term 'Sachverhalt' simply means a fact, what is the case, a state of affairs, not an atomic fact. — Fooloso4
The world is determined by the facts, and by these being all the facts. (1.11)
That it is pictures of facts that present those facts in logical space, if the facts are already in logical space? — 013zen
(6.375)Just as the only necessity that exists is logical necessity, so too the only impossibility that exists is logical impossibility.
(5.4731)What makes logic a priori is the impossibility of illogical thought.
A fact does not have this necessity - it's objects are their relations are merely accidental. — 013zen
In logic nothing is accidental: if a thing can occur in a state of affairs, the possibility of the
state of affairs must be written into the thing itself.
The world is determined by the facts, and by these being all the facts. (1.11)
Yes, they do determine the world, but they do not make up the world. Pictures do, and insofar as pictures are pictures of facts, the facts ultimately determines the world. — 013zen
Witt is thinking, I believe, of the realist/idealist/, empiricist/rationalist debate. — 013zen
[CV, p. 47].The language used by philosophers is already deformed, as though by shoes that are too tight
If I want to eat, a picture is not going to do the job. You do not make up a pizza from pictures of dough and cheese. This seems so obvious that I think you must mean something else, but I can't figure out what that is. — Fooloso4
In logical space, however, I can picture the process of making a pizza, without it actually obtaining in reality. — 013zen
Like, you're seemingly outright conflating the world and reality, — 013zen
(4.05)Reality is compared with propositions.
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