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The struggle against dogmatism Wittgenstein and the concept of philosophy /

Searching for rigor and a clear grasp of the essential features of their objects of investigation, philosophers are often driven to exaggerations and harmful simplifications. According to Ludwig Wittgenstein's provocative suggestion, this has to do with confusions relating to the status of phil...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Kuusela, Oskari
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Cambridge, Mass. : Harvard University Press, 2008.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Wittgenstein on philosophical problems : from the fundamental problem to particular problems
  • The tractatus on philosophical problems
  • Wittgensteins later conception of philosophical problems
  • Examples of philosophical problems as based on misunderstandings
  • Tendencies and inclinations of thinking, philosophy as therapy
  • Wittgensteins notion of peace in philosophy : the contrast with the Tractatus
  • Two conceptions of clarification
  • The tractatus conception of philosophy as logical analysis
  • Wittgensteins later critique of the tractatus notion of logical analysis
  • Clarification in wittgensteins later philosophy
  • From metaphysics and philosophical theses to grammar : wittgensteins turn
  • Philosophical theses, metaphysical philosophy and the tractatus
  • Metaphysics and conceptual investigation : the problem with metaphysics
  • Conceptual investigation and the problem of dogmatism
  • Wittgensteins turn
  • The turn and the role of rules
  • Rules as objects of comparison
  • Rules, the metaphysical projection and the logic of language
  • Grammar, meaning and language
  • Grammar, use and meaning : the problem of the status of Wittgenstein's remarks
  • The way Wittgenstein formulates his conception of meaning
  • The concept of language : comparisons with instruments and games
  • The later Wittgenstein's development and the advantages of his mature view
  • Examples as centers of variation and the conception of language as a family
  • Avoiding dogmatism about meaning
  • Wittgenstein's methodological shift and analyses in terms of necessary conditions
  • The concepts of essence and necessity
  • Constructivist readings and the arbitrariness/non-arbitrariness of grammar
  • Problems with constructivism
  • The methodological dimension of Wittgenstein's conception of essence
  • The non-temporality of grammatical statements
  • Explanations of necessity in terms of factual regularities
  • Wittgenstein's account of essence and necessity
  • Beyond theses about the source of necessity
  • Philosophical hierarchies and the status of clarificatory statements
  • Philosophical hierarchies and Wittgenstein's leading principle
  • The concept of perspicuous presentation
  • Necessity and the (alleged) necessity of accepting philosophical statements
  • The concept of agreement in Wittgenstein and the problem of injustice
  • The criteria of correctness of grammatical remarks
  • Multi-dimensional descriptions and the new use of old dogmatic claims
  • Wittgenstein's conception of philosophy, everyday language and ethics
  • The problem of metaphysics disguising itself as methodology
  • The historicity of philosophy
  • Philosophy and the everyday.