This volume, published on the fiftieth anniversary of
Wittgenstein's death, brings together thirteen of Crispin Wright's
most influential essays on Wittgenstein's later philosophies of
language and mind, many hard to obtain, including the first
publication of his Whitehead Lectures given at Harvard in 1996.
Organized into four groups, the essays focus on issues about
following a rule and the objectivity of meaning; on Saul Kripke's
contribution to the interpretation of Wittgenstein; on privacy and
self-knowledge; and on aspects of Wittgenstein's philosophy of
mathematics. Wright uses the cutting edge of Wittgenstein's thought
to expose and undermine the common assumptions in platonistic views
of mathematical and logical objectivity and Cartesian ideas about
self-knowledge. The great question remains: How to react to the
demise of these assumptions? In response, the essays develop a
concerted, evolving approach to the possibilities--and
limitations--of constructive philosophies of mathematics and mind.
Their collection constitutes a major statement by one of Britain's
most important philosophers--and will provide an indispensable tool
both for students of Wittgenstein and for scholars working more
generally in the metaphysics of mind and language.
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