|
Showing 1 - 5 of
5 matches in All Departments
This book argues that analytical philosophy and radical theory
alike stand in an ambivalent relationship with skepticism. It
explains structuralism, feminist theory and critical theory to
outline a therapeutic alternative to philosophical theoreticism.
This book offers two novel claims about Wittgenstein's views and
methods on perception as explored in the Philosophical
Investigations. The first is an interpretive claim about
Wittgenstein: that his views on sensation and perception, including
his critique of private language, have their roots in his
reflections on sense-datum theories and on what Hymers calls the
misleading metaphor of phenomenal space. The second is a major
philosophical claim: that Wittgenstein's critique of the misleading
metaphor of phenomenal space is of ongoing relevance to current
debates concerning first-person authority and the problem of
perception because we are still tempted to draw inferences about
the phenomenal that only apply to the physical. Many contemporary
discussions of these topics are thus premised on the very
confusions Wittgenstein sought to dispel. This book will appeal to
Wittgenstein scholars who are interested in the Philosophical
Investigations and to philosophers of perception who may think that
Wittgenstein's views are mistaken, irrelevant, or already
adequately appreciated.
This book offers two novel claims about Wittgenstein's views and
methods on perception as explored in the Philosophical
Investigations. The first is an interpretive claim about
Wittgenstein: that his views on sensation and perception, including
his critique of private language, have their roots in his
reflections on sense-datum theories and on what Hymers calls the
misleading metaphor of phenomenal space. The second is a major
philosophical claim: that Wittgenstein's critique of the misleading
metaphor of phenomenal space is of ongoing relevance to current
debates concerning first-person authority and the problem of
perception because we are still tempted to draw inferences about
the phenomenal that only apply to the physical. Many contemporary
discussions of these topics are thus premised on the very
confusions Wittgenstein sought to dispel. This book will appeal to
Wittgenstein scholars who are interested in the Philosophical
Investigations and to philosophers of perception who may think that
Wittgenstein's views are mistaken, irrelevant, or already
adequately appreciated.
This book argues that analytical philosophy and radical theory
alike stand in an ambivalent relationship with skepticism. It
explains structuralism, feminist theory and critical theory to
outline a therapeutic alternative to philosophical theoreticism.
Wittgenstein and the Practice of Philosophy introduces
Wittgenstein's philosophy to senior undergraduates and graduate
students. Its pedagogical premise is that the best way to
understand Wittgenstein's thought is to take seriously his
methodological remarks. Its interpretive premise is that those
methodological remarks are the natural result of Wittgenstein's
rejection of his early view of the ground of value, including
semantic value or meaning, as something that must lie "outside the
world." This metaphysical view of meaning is replaced in his
transitional writings with a kind of conventionalism, according to
which meaning is made possible by the existence of grammatical
conventions that are implicit in our linguistic practices. The
implicit nature of these conventions makes us vulnerable to a
special kind of confusion that results from lacking a clear view of
the norms that underlie our linguistic practices. This special
confusion is characteristic of philosophical problems, and the task
of philosophy is the therapeutic one of alleviating confusion by
helping us to see our grammatical norms clearly. This development
of this therapeutic view of philosophy is traced from
Wittgenstein's early Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus through his
transitional writings and lectures to his great masterwork,
Philosophical Investigations, and his final reflections on
knowledge and scepticism in On Certainty. Wittgenstein's
discussions of naming, family resemblances, rule-following and
private language in Philosophical Investigations are all examined
as instances of this sort of method, as is his discussion of
knowledge in On Certainty. The book concludes by considering some
objections to the viability of Wittgenstein's method and
speculating on how it might be extended to a discussion of moral
value to which Wittgenstein never explicitly returns.
|
You may like...
Bad Luck Penny
Amy Heydenrych
Paperback
(1)
R365
Discovery Miles 3 650
The Passenger
Cormac McCarthy
Paperback
R385
R347
Discovery Miles 3 470
|
Email address subscribed successfully.
A activation email has been sent to you.
Please click the link in that email to activate your subscription.