I am just pointing out that Wittgenstein starts from assumptions about the nature of truth and knowledge that were common to his niche — Count Timothy von Icarus
The term "noesis" has been revived by modern thinkers in a number of ways that are quite different from the term's historical meaning, so perhaps that is a source of confusion here..................................I think it's fairly obvious that Wittgenstein doesn't think such a faculty exists — Count Timothy von Icarus
"Noesis (a non-discursive, non-linguistic, reflexive grasp of truth) is impossible." — Count Timothy von Icarus
I don't think he would accept or reject it. He would say we have no way of definitively answering the question. — frank
A believer in Transcendental Apriosis is a Rationalist who proposes that a solitary thinker using pure reason can understand reality. — RussellA
But what language an archeological text is written in is an empirical question, no? — Count Timothy von Icarus
I think the point of the TLP is to show that when we talk about "understanding reality" in some rarified sense, we're doing something with language that it's not designed for. — frank
Partly wrong in that a Wittgenstein sentence, such as "snow is white", does correspond with the reality of the world. The Tractatus is basically setting out a correspondence theory. — RussellA
So I see what you're talking about, but I don't think he's talking in terms of a correspondence that a realist would approve of. — frank
1) Wittgenstein’s hinges function as indubitable certainties outside the domain of epistemological justification.
2) They differ from traditional propositions by enabling traditional truth operations to function. — Sam26
1) Wittgenstein’s hinges function as indubitable certainties outside the domain of epistemological justification.
2) They differ from traditional propositions by enabling traditional truth operations to function.
— Sam26
These are contradictory statements.
A hinge proposition cannot be both outside the domain of epistemological justification, including justifications such as truth and falsity, and be inside the domain of epistemology justification that enables truth operations. — RussellA
The truth of traditional propositions is tied to evidence or falsifiability. “It’s raining” is true if I look out and see rain; it’s false if I don’t. — Sam26
Hinges aren’t true in the same way that ordinary propositions are, i.e., they're beyond the truth-testing game. Their truth is their unshakeable role in our practices. — Sam26
The two language games I'm referring to are seen in one use of 'I know.." as an epistemological use, the other use as an expression of a conviction. Something I believe to be an indubitable truth, which doesn't have a justification like normal propositions. There is no justification; it's a lived conviction shown in our actions — Sam26
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