This essay is the last work by the philosopher Norman Malcolm,
before his death in the summer of 1990. Malcolm draws together a
large collection of remarks made by Wittgenstein at various stages
of his life and in many different contexts, which are expressive of
his attitude to religion. He discusses both some of the ways in
which Wittgenstein was drawn to religious ways of thinking and also
speculates concerning the barriers which stayed him from full
religious commitment. Malcolm connects these barriers with
Wittgenstein's commitment to philopsophy. He discusses what he
takes to be the most important features of Wittgestein's
philosophical work and the nature of and reasons for the changes
which took place in his thinking between "Tractatus
Logico-Philosophicus" and "Philosophical Investigations".
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