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2019年08月14日17:21

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Ludwig Wittgenstein - The Limits of Thought

Ray Monk (Professor of Philosophy at the University of Southampton),
Barry Smith (Lecturer in Philosophy at Birkbeck, University of London),
and Marie McGinn (Senior Lecturer in Philosophy at the University of York).


This is an introduction to the life, work, and legacy of the philosopher
Ludwig Wittgenstein. There is little doubt that he was a towering figure
of the twentieth century; on his return to Cambridge in 1929
Maynard Keynes wrote, “Well, God has arrived. I met him on the 5:15 train”. Wittgenstein is credited with being the greatest philosopher of
the modern age, a thinker who left not one but two philosophies for
his successors to argue over: The early Wittgenstein said, “the limits of
my language mean the limits of my world”; the later Wittgenstein replied,
“If God looked into our minds he would not have been able to see there
whom we were speaking of”. Language was at the heart of both.
Wittgenstein stated that his purpose was to finally free humanity
from the pointless and neurotic philosophical questing that plagues us all.
As he put it, “To show the fly the way out of the fly bottle”.
He was something of a philosopher's philosopher. But how did he think
language could solve all the problems of philosophy? How have his ideas influenced contemporary culture? And could his thought ever achieve
the release for us that he hoped it would?



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XB3OwIV5oro&list=PLfhVKgkLlqHiUC6DvNOtmjZ9YKMQft7OD&index=6
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