Agnostic.com
3 4

[the-tls.co.uk]

Wittgenstein is about the only continental philosopher I can stand. While his presentation was mystical and putposely obscure (a trademark of the continentals) at the heart are some deeply analytical thoughts which is why, I suspect, Russell took such an interest in him.

Here is a nice short review of the man and his philosophies and here is a PDF of his only book, The Tractatus:
[gutenberg.org]

TheMiddleWay 8 June 7
Share
You must be a member of this group before commenting. Join Group

Enjoy being online again!

Welcome to the community of good people who base their values on evidence and appreciate civil discourse - the social network you will enjoy.

Create your free account

3 comments

Feel free to reply to any comment by clicking the "Reply" button.

0

I'd like to hear your criticism of Derrida, then.

wdwyer Level 5 June 9, 2018

I know very little and nothing about his connection to Wittgenstein who I know next to nothing other than his name. My interest in Derrida is his concept of "l'autre," the other," that which can never be known. Derrida said there is what we know, in other words, the body of our current knowledge, and there is what we don't know (yet) but have the (human) capability to know through further study, research/discovery, etc., but there is that which we can never know because of our basic limitations as humans or whatever we could evolve beyond our current limitations as humans, In other words, there will always be that which can never be known. I probably haven't explained this very well but have found the idea fascinating since I first heard about it. I've always be disturbed my my limitations. Not just personal limitations, which are extensive, but also by limitations that prevent humans from being able to gain any further knowledge beyond our abilities to discover new knowledge through whatever means we can develop as humans.

1

It is an interesting question - whether Wittgenstein was at heart an analytic philosopher in the English tradition, or whether he was really in the Germanic Kantian tradition. His obscurity was a failing, I believe.

CeliaVL Level 7 June 7, 2018

@TheMiddleWay Yes, you are right if one cannot make a point clearly ... But the question is what are the clear points in philosophy?

@TheMiddleWay but life is still an analog event.

3

The Tractatus was the only work W published during his lifetime.

His "Philosophical Investigations" is considered a modern classic, it was published posthumously 1953.
[static1.squarespace.com]

cava Level 7 June 7, 2018

Recent Visitors 27

Photos

Posted by JettyPerspective

Posted by PontifexMarximusWhy Evolution Is True … I never realised that there was still so much opposition to science. [livescience.com]

Posted by NR92What is the reason to live? What are we living for?

Posted by NR92Is it correct that Nietzsche was Hitler's inspiration?

Posted by mzeeWhat is fear?

Posted by DonaldHRobertsThe Most Complicated question ever asked. WHY?

Posted by TheMiddleWayRussel, the greatest salesman the world has ever known!

  • Top tags#philosophy #world #god #truth #video #religion #book #laws #reason #humans #religious #moral #atheism #money #belief #death #Atheist #beliefs #evidence #friends #Christian #Bible #humanity #faith #DonaldTrump #TheTruth #scientific #USA #fear #hope #culture #books #morality #earth #freedom #Wisdom #media #imagination #tradition #existence #university #hello #society #rape #government #ethics #politics #children #created #wife ...

    Members 437Top

    Moderators