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Philosophical Investigations

Philosophical Investigations (German: Philosophische Untersuchungen) is a work by the philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein, published posthumously in 1953.

Philosophical Investigations
Cover of the first English edition
AuthorLudwig Wittgenstein
Original titlePhilosophische Untersuchungen
TranslatorG. E. M. Anscombe
LanguageGerman
SubjectOrdinary language philosophy
Publication date
1953
Media typePrint (Hardcover and Paperback)
OCLC954131267

Philosophical Investigations is divided into two parts, consisting of what Wittgenstein calls, in the preface, Bemerkungen, translated by Anscombe as "remarks".[1]

A survey among American university and college teachers ranked the Investigations as the most important book of 20th-century philosophy.[2]

Relation to Wittgenstein's body of work edit

In its preface, Wittgenstein says that Philosophical Investigations can be understood "only by contrast with and against the background of my old way of thinking". That "old way of thinking" is to be found in the only book Wittgenstein published in his lifetime, the Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus. Many of the ideas developed in the Tractatus are criticised in the Investigations, while other ideas are further developed.

The Blue and Brown Books, a set of notes dictated to his class at Cambridge in 1933–1934, contains the seeds of Wittgenstein's later thoughts on language and is widely read as a turning point in his philosophy of language.

Themes edit

Language-games edit

Wittgenstein develops this discussion of games into the key notion of a language-game. For Wittgenstein, his use of the term language-game "is meant to bring into prominence the fact that the speaking of language is part of an activity, or of a life-form."[3] A central feature of language-games is that language is used in context and cannot be understood outside of that context. Wittgenstein lists the following as examples of language-games: "Giving orders, and obeying them"; "describing the appearance of an object, or giving its measurements"; "constructing an object from a description (a drawing)"; "reporting an event"; "speculating about an event".[3] The famous example is the meaning of the word "game". We speak of various kinds of games: board games, betting games, sports, and "war games". These are all different uses of the word "games". Wittgenstein also gives the example of "Water!", which can be used as an exclamation, an order, a request, or an answer to a question. The meaning of the word depends on the language-game in which it is used. Another way Wittgenstein makes the point is that the word "water" has no meaning apart from its use within a language-game. One might use the word as an order to have someone else bring you a glass of water. But it can also be used to warn someone that the water has been poisoned. One might even use the word as a code by members of a secret society.

Wittgenstein does not limit the application of his concept of language games to word meaning. He also applies it to sentence meaning. For example, the sentence "Moses did not exist" (§79) can mean various things. Wittgenstein argues that, independent of use, the sentence does not yet 'say' anything. It is 'meaningless' in the sense of not being significant for a particular purpose. It only acquires significance if we fix it within some context of use. Thus, it fails to say anything because the sentence as such does not yet determine some particular use. The sentence is only meaningful when it is used to say something. For instance, it can be used so as to say that no person or historical figure fits the set of descriptions attributed to the person that goes by the name of "Moses". But it can also mean that the leader of the Israelites was not called Moses. Or that there cannot have been anyone who accomplished all that the Bible relates about Moses, etc. What the sentence means thus depends on its context of use.

Meaning as use edit

The Investigations deal largely with the difficulties of language and meaning. Wittgenstein viewed the tools of language as being fundamentally simple [a][non-primary source needed], and he believed that philosophers had obscured this simplicity by misusing language and by asking meaningless questions. He attempted in the Investigations to make things clear: "Der Fliege den Ausweg aus dem Fliegenglas zeigen"—to show the fly the way out of the fly bottle.[4]

Wittgenstein claims that the meaning of a word is based on how the word is understood within the language-game. A common summary of his argument is that meaning is use. According to the use theory of meaning, the words are not defined by reference to the objects they designate or by the mental representations one might associate with them, but by how they are used. For example, this means there is no need to postulate that there is something called good that exists independently of any good deed.[5] Wittgenstein's theory of meaning contrasts with Platonic realism[6] and with Gottlob Frege's notions of sense and reference.[7] This argument has been labeled by some authors as "anthropological holism".[8]

Section 43 in Wittgenstein's Philosophical Investigations reads: "For a large class of cases—though not for all—in which we employ the word "meaning," it can be defined thus: the meaning of a word is its use in the language."

Wittgenstein begins Philosophical Investigations with a quote from Augustine's Confessions, which represents the view that language serves to point out objects in the world and the view that he will be criticizing.[9]

The individual words in a language name objects—sentences are combinations of such names. In this picture of language, we find the roots of the following idea: Every word has a meaning. This meaning is correlated with the word. It is the object for which the word stands.

Wittgenstein rejects a variety of ways of thinking about what the meaning of a word is or how meanings can be identified. He shows how, in each case, the meaning of the word presupposes our ability to use it. He first asks the reader to perform a thought experiment: come up with a definition of the word "game".[10] While this may at first seem like a simple task, he then goes on to lead us through the problems with each of the possible definitions of the word "game". Any definition that focuses on amusement leaves us unsatisfied since the feelings experienced by a world-class chess player are very different from those of a circle of children playing Duck Duck Goose. Any definition that focuses on competition will fail to explain the game of catch, or the game of solitaire. And a definition of the word "game" that focuses on rules will fall into similar difficulties.

The essential point of this exercise is often missed. Wittgenstein's point is not that it is impossible to define "game", but that even if we don't have a definition, we can still use the word successfully.[11] Everybody understands what we mean when we talk about playing a game, and we can even clearly identify and correct inaccurate uses of the word, all without reference to any definition that consists of necessary and sufficient conditions for the application of the concept of a game. The German word for "game", "Spiele/Spiel", has a different sense than in English; the meaning of "Spiele" also extends to the concept of "play" and "playing." This German sense of the word may help readers better understand Wittgenstein's context in his remarks regarding games.

Wittgenstein argues that definitions emerge from what he termed "forms of life", roughly the culture and society in which they are used. Wittgenstein stresses the social aspects of cognition; to see how language works in most cases, we have to see how it functions in a specific social situation.[citation needed] It is this emphasis on becoming attentive to the social backdrop against which language is rendered intelligible that explains Wittgenstein's elliptical comment that "If a lion could talk, we could not understand him." However, in proposing the thought experiment involving the fictional character Robinson Crusoe, a captain shipwrecked on a desolate island with no other inhabitant, Wittgenstein shows that language is not in all cases a social phenomenon (although it is in most cases); instead, the criterion for a language is grounded in a set of interrelated normative activities: teaching, explanations, techniques, and criteria of correctness. In short, it is essential that a language be shareable, but this does not imply that for a language to function, it must be already shared.[12]

Wittgenstein rejects the idea that ostensive definitions can provide us with the meaning of a word. For Wittgenstein, the thing that the word stands for does not give the meaning of the word. Wittgenstein argues for this by making a series of moves to show that understanding an ostensive definition presupposes an understanding of the way the word being defined is used.[13][14] So, for instance, there is no difference between pointing to a piece of paper, to its colour, or to its shape, but understanding the difference is crucial to using the paper in an ostensive definition of a shape or of a colour.

Family resemblances edit

Why is it that we are sure a particular activity—e.g. Olympic target shooting—is a game while a similar activity—e.g. military sharp shooting—is not?[citation needed] Wittgenstein's explanation is tied up with an important analogy. How do we recognize that two people we know are related to one another? We may see similar height, weight, eye color, hair, nose, mouth, patterns of speech, social or political views, mannerisms, body structure, last names, etc. If we see enough matches we say we've noticed a family resemblance.[15] It is perhaps important to note that this is not always a conscious process—generally we don't catalog various similarities until we reach a certain threshold, we just intuitively see the resemblances. Wittgenstein suggests that the same is true of language. We are all familiar (i.e. socially) with enough things which are games and enough things which are not games that we can categorize new activities as either games or not.

This brings us back to Wittgenstein's reliance on indirect communication, and his reliance on thought-experiments. Some philosophical confusions come about because we aren't able to see family resemblances. We've made a mistake in understanding the vague and intuitive rules that language uses, and have thereby tied ourselves up in philosophical knots. He suggests that an attempt to untangle these knots requires more than simple deductive arguments pointing out the problems with some particular position. Instead, Wittgenstein's larger goal is to try to divert us from our philosophical problems long enough to become aware of our intuitive ability to see the family resemblances.

Rules and rule-following edit

Wittgenstein's discussion of rules and rule-following ranges from § 138 through § 242. Wittgenstein begins his discussion of rules with the example of one person giving orders to another "to write down a series of signs according to a certain formation rule."[16] The series of signs consists of the natural numbers. Wittgenstein draws a distinction between following orders by copying the numbers following instruction and understanding the construction of the series of numbers. One general characteristic of games that Wittgenstein considers in detail is the way in which they consist in following rules. Rules constitute a family, rather than a class that can be explicitly defined.[17] As a consequence, it is not possible to provide a definitive account of what it is to follow a rule. Indeed, he argues that any course of action can be made out to accord with some particular rule, and that therefore a rule cannot be used to explain an action.[18] Rather, that one is following a rule or not is to be decided by looking to see if the actions conform to the expectations in the particular form of life in which one is involved. Following a rule is a social activity.

Saul Kripke provides an influential discussion of Wittgenstein's remarks on rules. For Kripke, Wittgenstein's discussion of rules "may be regarded as a new form of philosophical scepticism."[19] He starts his discussion of Wittgenstein by quoting what he describes as Wittgenstein's sceptical paradox: "This was our paradox: no course of action could be determined by a rule, because every course of action can be made out to accord with the rule. The answer was: if everything can be made out to accord with the rule, then it can also be made out to conflict with it. And so there would be neither accord nor conflict here."[20] Kripke argues that the implications of Wittgenstein's discussion of rules is that no person can mean something by the language that they use or correctly follow (or fail to follow) a rule.[21]

Private language edit

Wittgenstein also ponders the possibility of a language that talks about those things that are known only to the user, whose content is inherently private. The usual example is that of a language in which one names one's sensations and other subjective experiences, such that the meaning of the term is decided by the individual alone. For example, the individual names a particular sensation, on some occasion, 'S', and intends to use that word to refer to that sensation.[22] Such a language Wittgenstein calls a private language.

Wittgenstein presents several perspectives on the topic. One point he makes is that it is incoherent to talk of knowing that one is in some particular mental state.[23] Whereas others can learn of my pain, for example, I simply have my own pain; it follows that one does not know of one's own pain, one simply has a pain. For Wittgenstein, this is a grammatical point, part of the way in which the language-game involving the word "pain" is played.[24]

Although Wittgenstein certainly argues that the notion of private language is incoherent, because of the way in which the text is presented the exact nature of the argument is disputed. First, he argues that a private language is not really a language at all. This point is intimately connected with a variety of other themes in his later works, especially his investigations of "meaning". For Wittgenstein, there is no single, coherent "sample" or "object" that we can call "meaning". Rather, the supposition that there are such things is the source of many philosophical confusions. Meaning is a complicated phenomenon that is woven into the fabric of our lives. A good first approximation of Wittgenstein's point is that meaning is a social event; meaning happens between language users. As a consequence, it makes no sense to talk about a private language, with words that mean something in the absence of other users of the language.

Wittgenstein also argues that one couldn't possibly use the words of a private language.[25] He invites the reader to consider a case in which someone decides that each time she has a particular sensation she will place a sign S in a diary. Wittgenstein points out that in such a case one could have no criteria for the correctness of one's use of S. Again, several examples are considered. One is that perhaps using S involves mentally consulting a table of sensations, to check that one has associated S correctly; but in this case, how could the mental table be checked for its correctness? It is "[a]s if someone were to buy several copies of the morning paper to assure himself that what it said was true", as Wittgenstein puts it.[26] One common interpretation of the argument is that while one may have direct or privileged access to one's current mental states, there is no such infallible access to identifying previous mental states that one had in the past. That is, the only way to check to see if one has applied the symbol S correctly to a certain mental state is to introspect and determine whether the current sensation is identical to the sensation previously associated with S. And while identifying one's current mental state of remembering may be infallible, whether one remembered correctly is not infallible. Thus, for a language to be used at all it must have some public criterion of identity.

Often, what is widely regarded as a deep philosophical problem will vanish, argues Wittgenstein, and eventually be seen as a confusion about the significance of the words that philosophers use to frame such problems and questions. It is only in this way that it is interesting to talk about something like a "private language" — i.e., it is helpful to see how the "problem" results from a misunderstanding.

To sum up: Wittgenstein asserts that, if something is a language, it cannot be (logically) private; and if something is private, it is not (and cannot be) a language.

Wittgenstein's beetle edit

Another point that Wittgenstein makes against the possibility of a private language involves the beetle-in-a-box thought experiment.[27] He asks the reader to imagine that each person has a box, inside which is something that everyone intends to refer to with the word "beetle". Further, suppose that no one can look inside another's box, and each claims to know what a "beetle" is only by examining their own box. Wittgenstein suggests that, in such a situation, the word "beetle" could not be the name of a thing, because supposing that each person has something completely different in their boxes (or nothing at all) does not change the meaning of the word; the beetle as a private object "drops out of consideration as irrelevant".[27] Thus, Wittgenstein argues, if we can talk about something, then it is not private, in the sense considered. And, contrapositively, if we consider something to be indeed private, it follows that we cannot talk about it.

Mind edit

Wittgenstein's investigations of language lead to several issues concerning the mind. His key target of criticism is any form of extreme mentalism that posits mental states that are entirely unconnected to the subject's environment. For Wittgenstein, thought is inevitably tied to language, which is inherently social. Part of Wittgenstein's credo is captured in the following proclamation: "An 'inner process' stands in need of outward criteria."[28] This follows primarily from his conclusions about private languages: similarly, a private mental state (a sensation of pain, for example) cannot be adequately discussed without public criteria for identifying it.

According to Wittgenstein, those who insist that consciousness (or any other apparently subjective mental state) is conceptually unconnected to the external world are mistaken. Wittgenstein explicitly criticizes so-called conceivability arguments: "Could one imagine a stone's having consciousness? And if anyone can do so—why should that not merely prove that such image-mongery is of no interest to us?"[29] He considers and rejects the following reply as well:

"But if I suppose that someone is in pain, then I am simply supposing that he has just the same as I have so often had." — That gets us no further. It is as if I were to say: "You surely know what 'It is 5 o'clock here' means; so you also know what 'It's 5 o'clock on the sun' means. It means simply that it is just the same there as it is here when it is 5 o'clock." — The explanation by means of identity does not work here.[30]

Thus, according to Wittgenstein, mental states are intimately connected to a subject's environment, especially their linguistic environment, and conceivability or imaginability. Arguments that claim otherwise are misguided.

Seeing that vs. seeing as edit

 
The duck-rabbit, made famous by Wittgenstein

In addition to ambiguous sentences, Wittgenstein discussed figures that can be seen and understood in two different ways. Often one can see something in a straightforward way — seeing that it is a rabbit, perhaps. But, at other times, one notices a particular aspect — seeing it as something.

An example Wittgenstein uses is the "duckrabbit", an ambiguous image that can be seen as either a duck or a rabbit.[31] When one looks at the duck-rabbit and sees a rabbit, one is not interpreting the picture as a rabbit, but rather reporting what one sees. One just sees the picture as a rabbit. But what occurs when one sees it first as a duck, then as a rabbit? As the gnomic remarks in the Investigations indicate, Wittgenstein isn't sure. However, he is sure that it could not be the case that the external world stays the same while an 'internal' cognitive change takes place.

Response and influence edit

Bertrand Russell made the following comment on the Philosophical Investigations in his book My Philosophical Development:

I have not found in Wittgenstein's Philosophical Investigations anything that seemed to me interesting and I do not understand why a whole school finds important wisdom in its pages. Psychologically this is surprising. The earlier Wittgenstein, whom I knew intimately, was a man addicted to passionately intense thinking, profoundly aware of difficult problems of which I, like him, felt the importance, and possessed (or at least so I thought) of true philosophical genius. The later Wittgenstein, on the contrary, seems to have grown tired of serious thinking and to have invented a doctrine which would make such an activity unnecessary. I do not for one moment believe that the doctrine which has these lazy consequences is true. I realize, however, that I have an overpoweringly strong bias against it, for, if it is true, philosophy is, at best, a slight help to lexicographers, and at worst, an idle tea-table amusement.[32]

Ernest Gellner wrote the book Words and Things, in which he was fiercely critical of the work of Ludwig Wittgenstein, J. L. Austin, Gilbert Ryle, Antony Flew, P. F. Strawson and many others. Ryle refused to have the book reviewed in the philosophical journal Mind (which he edited), and Bertrand Russell (who had written an approving foreword) protested in a letter to The Times. A response from Ryle and a lengthy correspondence ensued.[33]

Besides stressing the differences between the Investigations' and the Tractatus, there are critical approaches which have argued that there is much more continuity and similarity between the two works than supposed. One of these is the New Wittgenstein approach.

Kripkenstein edit

The discussion of private languages was revitalized in 1982 with the publication of Kripke's book Wittgenstein on Rules and Private Language.[34] In this work, Kripke uses Wittgenstein's text to develop a particular type of skepticism about rules that stresses the communal nature of language-use as grounding meaning.[35] Critics of Kripke's version of Wittgenstein have facetiously referred to it as "Kripkenstein,"[36] scholars such as Gordon Baker,[37] Peter Hacker,[37] Colin McGinn,[38] and John McDowell[39] seeing it as a radical misinterpretation of Wittgenstein's text. Other philosophers – such as Martin Kusch – have defended Kripke's views.[40]

Editions edit

Philosophical Investigations was not ready for publication when Wittgenstein died in 1951. G. E. M. Anscombe translated Wittgenstein's manuscript into English, and it was first published in 1953. There are multiple editions of Philosophical Investigations with the popular third edition and 50th anniversary edition having been edited by Anscombe:

  • First Edition: Blackwell Publishers 1953. (ISBN 9780631103202) German-English Edition, translation by G. E. M. Anscombe.
  • Second Edition: Blackwell Publishers, 1958.
  • Third Edition: Prentice Hall, 1973 (ISBN 0-02-428810-1).
  • 50th Anniversary Edition: Blackwell Publishers, 2001 (ISBN 0-631-23127-7). This edition includes the original German text in addition to the English translation.
  • Fourth Edition: Wiley-Blackwell, 2009 (ISBN 978-1-4051-5928-9). This edition includes the original German text in addition to the English translation.[b]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ §97 quotation:

    the order of possibilities, which must be common to both world and thought... must be utterly simple.

  2. ^ The first two editions (1953 and 1958) were Anscombe's text; in the anniversary edition (2001), P. M. S. Hacker and Joachim Schulte are also credited as translators. The fourth edition (2009) was presented as a revision by Hacker and Schulte, crediting Anscombe, Hacker, and Schulte as translators.
  3. ^ Remarks in Part I of Investigations are preceded by the symbol "§". Remarks in Part II are referenced by their Roman numeral or their page number in the third edition.

Citations edit

  1. ^ Wittgenstein (1953), Preface. (All citations will be from Wittgenstein (1953), unless otherwise noted.)
  2. ^ Lackey, Douglas P. (1999). "What Are the Modern Classics? The Baruch Poll of Great Philosophy in the Twentieth Century". The Philosophical Forum. 30 (4): 329–346. doi:10.1111/0031-806X.00022. ISSN 1467-9191.
  3. ^ a b Wittgenstein, Ludwig (1953). Philosophical Investigations: The German Text, with a Revised English Translation. Blackwell. pp. § 23. ISBN 9780631231592.
  4. ^ §309; the original English translation used the word "shew" for "show."
  5. ^ §77
  6. ^ Sedley, D.N. (2003). Plato's Cratylus (7th ed.). Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press.
  7. ^ Jesús Padilla Gálvez Philosophical Anthropology: Wittgenstein's Perspective, p.18
  8. ^ Nicholas Bunnin, Jiyuan Yu (2008) The Blackwell Dictionary of Western Philosophy, entry for anthropological holism p.34
  9. ^ Wittgenstein, Ludwig (1953). Philosophical Investigations: The German Text, with a Revised English Translation. Blackwell. pp. § 1. ISBN 9780631231592.
  10. ^ See §3.
  11. ^ See §66 (Wittgenstein. PI. Blackwell Publishers, 2001).
  12. ^ (II, xi), p.190
  13. ^ See §26–34.
  14. ^ Stern, David G. (2008). "Wittgenstein's critique of referential theories of meaning and the paradox of ostension, Philosophical Investigations §§26-48". In Zamuner, Edoardo; Levy, D.K. (eds.). Wittgenstein's Enduring Arguments. Routledge. p. 192. ISBN 9781134107063.
  15. ^ See §66-§71.
  16. ^ Wittgenstein, Ludwig (2001). Philosophical Investigations: The German Text, with a Revised English Translation 50th Anniversary Commemorative Edition. Wiley. § 143. ISBN 9780631231592.
  17. ^ §54
  18. ^ See §201.
  19. ^ Kripke, Saul A. (1982). Wittgenstein on Rules and Private Language: An Elementary Exposition. Harvard University Press. p. 7. ISBN 9780674954014.
  20. ^ Wittgenstein, Ludwig (2001). Philosophical Investigations: The German Text, with a Revised English Translation. Blackwell. § 201. ISBN 9780631231592.
  21. ^ Biletzki, Anat; Matar, Anat (2018), "Ludwig Wittgenstein", in Zalta, Edward N. (ed.), The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Summer 2018 ed.), Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University, retrieved 2019-06-03
  22. ^ §243
  23. ^ §246
  24. ^ §248
  25. ^ §256
  26. ^ §265
  27. ^ a b §293
  28. ^ §580.
  29. ^ §390
  30. ^ §350
  31. ^ Part II, §xi
  32. ^ Russell, Bertrand (1959). My Philosophical Development. New York: Allen & Unwin. pp. 216–217. ISBN 0041920155.
  33. ^ T. P. Uschanov, The Strange Death of Ordinary Language Philosophy. The controversy has been described by the writer Ved Mehta in Fly and the Fly-Bottle: Encounters with British Intellectuals (1963).
  34. ^ Kripke, Saul. Wittgenstein on Rules and Private Language. Basil Blackwell Publishing, 1982.
  35. ^ Stern 2004:2–7
  36. ^ Carrie Ichikawa Jenkins (June 2011). "Kripkenstein and the Cleverly Disguised Mules". Analytic Philosophy. 52 (2): 88–99. doi:10.1111/j.2153-960X.2011.00521.x.
  37. ^ a b Gordon Baker; Peter Hacker (March 1984). "On Misunderstanding Wittgenstein: Kripke's Private Language Argument". Synthese. 58 (3): 407–450. doi:10.1007/BF00485249. S2CID 46958320.
  38. ^ Jane Heal (July 1986). "Wittgenstein, Kripke and Meaning: Review of "Wittgenstein on Meaning" by Colin McGinn". The Philosophical Quarterly. 36 (144): 412, 414, 416–418. doi:10.2307/2220196. JSTOR 2220196.
  39. ^ John McDowell (March 1984). "Wittgenstein on Following a Rule". Synthese. 58 (3): 328–333, 336–338, 342–344. doi:10.1007/BF00485246. S2CID 46982326.
  40. ^ Martin Kusch (2006). A Sceptical Guide to Meaning and Rules: Defending Kripke's Wittgenstein. Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 978-0773531666.

References edit

External links edit

  • from Wittgenstein's Philosophical Investigations with Commentary by Lois Shawver (archived 13 March 2016)
  • – description of the thought experiment from Philosophy Online (archived 4 February 2012)
  • As The Hammer Strikes in Fillip
  • Original German text of the Philosophical Investigations at the Ludwig Wittgenstein Project

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This article is about the book by Wittgenstein For other uses of Philosophical Investigation or Philosophical Investigations see Philosophical Investigations disambiguation This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed May 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources Philosophical Investigations news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Philosophical Investigations German Philosophische Untersuchungen is a work by the philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein published posthumously in 1953 Philosophical InvestigationsCover of the first English editionAuthorLudwig WittgensteinOriginal titlePhilosophische UntersuchungenTranslatorG E M AnscombeLanguageGermanSubjectOrdinary language philosophyPublication date1953Media typePrint Hardcover and Paperback OCLC954131267 Philosophical Investigations is divided into two parts consisting of what Wittgenstein calls in the preface Bemerkungen translated by Anscombe as remarks 1 A survey among American university and college teachers ranked the Investigations as the most important book of 20th century philosophy 2 Contents 1 Relation to Wittgenstein s body of work 2 Themes 2 1 Language games 2 2 Meaning as use 2 3 Family resemblances 2 4 Rules and rule following 2 5 Private language 2 6 Wittgenstein s beetle 2 7 Mind 2 8 Seeing that vs seeing as 3 Response and influence 3 1 Kripkenstein 4 Editions 5 See also 6 Notes 7 Citations 8 References 9 External linksRelation to Wittgenstein s body of work editIn its preface Wittgenstein says that Philosophical Investigations can be understood only by contrast with and against the background of my old way of thinking That old way of thinking is to be found in the only book Wittgenstein published in his lifetime the Tractatus Logico Philosophicus Many of the ideas developed in the Tractatus are criticised in the Investigations while other ideas are further developed The Blue and Brown Books a set of notes dictated to his class at Cambridge in 1933 1934 contains the seeds of Wittgenstein s later thoughts on language and is widely read as a turning point in his philosophy of language Themes editLanguage games edit Wittgenstein develops this discussion of games into the key notion of a language game For Wittgenstein his use of the term language game is meant to bring into prominence the fact that the speaking of language is part of an activity or of a life form 3 A central feature of language games is that language is used in context and cannot be understood outside of that context Wittgenstein lists the following as examples of language games Giving orders and obeying them describing the appearance of an object or giving its measurements constructing an object from a description a drawing reporting an event speculating about an event 3 The famous example is the meaning of the word game We speak of various kinds of games board games betting games sports and war games These are all different uses of the word games Wittgenstein also gives the example of Water which can be used as an exclamation an order a request or an answer to a question The meaning of the word depends on the language game in which it is used Another way Wittgenstein makes the point is that the word water has no meaning apart from its use within a language game One might use the word as an order to have someone else bring you a glass of water But it can also be used to warn someone that the water has been poisoned One might even use the word as a code by members of a secret society Wittgenstein does not limit the application of his concept of language games to word meaning He also applies it to sentence meaning For example the sentence Moses did not exist 79 can mean various things Wittgenstein argues that independent of use the sentence does not yet say anything It is meaningless in the sense of not being significant for a particular purpose It only acquires significance if we fix it within some context of use Thus it fails to say anything because the sentence as such does not yet determine some particular use The sentence is only meaningful when it is used to say something For instance it can be used so as to say that no person or historical figure fits the set of descriptions attributed to the person that goes by the name of Moses But it can also mean that the leader of the Israelites was not called Moses Or that there cannot have been anyone who accomplished all that the Bible relates about Moses etc What the sentence means thus depends on its context of use Meaning as use edit The Investigations deal largely with the difficulties of language and meaning Wittgenstein viewed the tools of language as being fundamentally simple a non primary source needed and he believed that philosophers had obscured this simplicity by misusing language and by asking meaningless questions He attempted in the Investigations to make things clear Der Fliege den Ausweg aus dem Fliegenglas zeigen to show the fly the way out of the fly bottle 4 Wittgenstein claims that the meaning of a word is based on how the word is understood within the language game A common summary of his argument is that meaning is use According to the use theory of meaning the words are not defined by reference to the objects they designate or by the mental representations one might associate with them but by how they are used For example this means there is no need to postulate that there is something called good that exists independently of any good deed 5 Wittgenstein s theory of meaning contrasts with Platonic realism 6 and with Gottlob Frege s notions of sense and reference 7 This argument has been labeled by some authors as anthropological holism 8 Section 43 in Wittgenstein s Philosophical Investigations reads For a large class of cases though not for all in which we employ the word meaning it can be defined thus the meaning of a word is its use in the language Wittgenstein begins Philosophical Investigations with a quote from Augustine s Confessions which represents the view that language serves to point out objects in the world and the view that he will be criticizing 9 The individual words in a language name objects sentences are combinations of such names In this picture of language we find the roots of the following idea Every word has a meaning This meaning is correlated with the word It is the object for which the word stands Wittgenstein rejects a variety of ways of thinking about what the meaning of a word is or how meanings can be identified He shows how in each case the meaning of the word presupposes our ability to use it He first asks the reader to perform a thought experiment come up with a definition of the word game 10 While this may at first seem like a simple task he then goes on to lead us through the problems with each of the possible definitions of the word game Any definition that focuses on amusement leaves us unsatisfied since the feelings experienced by a world class chess player are very different from those of a circle of children playing Duck Duck Goose Any definition that focuses on competition will fail to explain the game of catch or the game of solitaire And a definition of the word game that focuses on rules will fall into similar difficulties The essential point of this exercise is often missed Wittgenstein s point is not that it is impossible to define game but that even if we don t have a definition we can still use the word successfully 11 Everybody understands what we mean when we talk about playing a game and we can even clearly identify and correct inaccurate uses of the word all without reference to any definition that consists of necessary and sufficient conditions for the application of the concept of a game The German word for game Spiele Spiel has a different sense than in English the meaning of Spiele also extends to the concept of play and playing This German sense of the word may help readers better understand Wittgenstein s context in his remarks regarding games Wittgenstein argues that definitions emerge from what he termed forms of life roughly the culture and society in which they are used Wittgenstein stresses the social aspects of cognition to see how language works in most cases we have to see how it functions in a specific social situation citation needed It is this emphasis on becoming attentive to the social backdrop against which language is rendered intelligible that explains Wittgenstein s elliptical comment that If a lion could talk we could not understand him However in proposing the thought experiment involving the fictional character Robinson Crusoe a captain shipwrecked on a desolate island with no other inhabitant Wittgenstein shows that language is not in all cases a social phenomenon although it is in most cases instead the criterion for a language is grounded in a set of interrelated normative activities teaching explanations techniques and criteria of correctness In short it is essential that a language be shareable but this does not imply that for a language to function it must be already shared 12 Wittgenstein rejects the idea that ostensive definitions can provide us with the meaning of a word For Wittgenstein the thing that the word stands for does not give the meaning of the word Wittgenstein argues for this by making a series of moves to show that understanding an ostensive definition presupposes an understanding of the way the word being defined is used 13 14 So for instance there is no difference between pointing to a piece of paper to its colour or to its shape but understanding the difference is crucial to using the paper in an ostensive definition of a shape or of a colour Family resemblances edit Main article Family resemblance Why is it that we are sure a particular activity e g Olympic target shooting is a game while a similar activity e g military sharp shooting is not citation needed Wittgenstein s explanation is tied up with an important analogy How do we recognize that two people we know are related to one another We may see similar height weight eye color hair nose mouth patterns of speech social or political views mannerisms body structure last names etc If we see enough matches we say we ve noticed a family resemblance 15 It is perhaps important to note that this is not always a conscious process generally we don t catalog various similarities until we reach a certain threshold we just intuitively see the resemblances Wittgenstein suggests that the same is true of language We are all familiar i e socially with enough things which are games and enough things which are not games that we can categorize new activities as either games or not This brings us back to Wittgenstein s reliance on indirect communication and his reliance on thought experiments Some philosophical confusions come about because we aren t able to see family resemblances We ve made a mistake in understanding the vague and intuitive rules that language uses and have thereby tied ourselves up in philosophical knots He suggests that an attempt to untangle these knots requires more than simple deductive arguments pointing out the problems with some particular position Instead Wittgenstein s larger goal is to try to divert us from our philosophical problems long enough to become aware of our intuitive ability to see the family resemblances Rules and rule following edit Wittgenstein s discussion of rules and rule following ranges from 138 through 242 Wittgenstein begins his discussion of rules with the example of one person giving orders to another to write down a series of signs according to a certain formation rule 16 The series of signs consists of the natural numbers Wittgenstein draws a distinction between following orders by copying the numbers following instruction and understanding the construction of the series of numbers One general characteristic of games that Wittgenstein considers in detail is the way in which they consist in following rules Rules constitute a family rather than a class that can be explicitly defined 17 As a consequence it is not possible to provide a definitive account of what it is to follow a rule Indeed he argues that any course of action can be made out to accord with some particular rule and that therefore a rule cannot be used to explain an action 18 Rather that one is following a rule or not is to be decided by looking to see if the actions conform to the expectations in the particular form of life in which one is involved Following a rule is a social activity Saul Kripke provides an influential discussion of Wittgenstein s remarks on rules For Kripke Wittgenstein s discussion of rules may be regarded as a new form of philosophical scepticism 19 He starts his discussion of Wittgenstein by quoting what he describes as Wittgenstein s sceptical paradox This was our paradox no course of action could be determined by a rule because every course of action can be made out to accord with the rule The answer was if everything can be made out to accord with the rule then it can also be made out to conflict with it And so there would be neither accord nor conflict here 20 Kripke argues that the implications of Wittgenstein s discussion of rules is that no person can mean something by the language that they use or correctly follow or fail to follow a rule 21 Private language edit Main article Private language argument Wittgenstein also ponders the possibility of a language that talks about those things that are known only to the user whose content is inherently private The usual example is that of a language in which one names one s sensations and other subjective experiences such that the meaning of the term is decided by the individual alone For example the individual names a particular sensation on some occasion S and intends to use that word to refer to that sensation 22 Such a language Wittgenstein calls a private language Wittgenstein presents several perspectives on the topic One point he makes is that it is incoherent to talk of knowing that one is in some particular mental state 23 Whereas others can learn of my pain for example I simply have my own pain it follows that one does not know of one s own pain one simply has a pain For Wittgenstein this is a grammatical point part of the way in which the language game involving the word pain is played 24 Although Wittgenstein certainly argues that the notion of private language is incoherent because of the way in which the text is presented the exact nature of the argument is disputed First he argues that a private language is not really a language at all This point is intimately connected with a variety of other themes in his later works especially his investigations of meaning For Wittgenstein there is no single coherent sample or object that we can call meaning Rather the supposition that there are such things is the source of many philosophical confusions Meaning is a complicated phenomenon that is woven into the fabric of our lives A good first approximation of Wittgenstein s point is that meaning is a social event meaning happens between language users As a consequence it makes no sense to talk about a private language with words that mean something in the absence of other users of the language Wittgenstein also argues that one couldn t possibly use the words of a private language 25 He invites the reader to consider a case in which someone decides that each time she has a particular sensation she will place a sign S in a diary Wittgenstein points out that in such a case one could have no criteria for the correctness of one s use of S Again several examples are considered One is that perhaps using S involves mentally consulting a table of sensations to check that one has associated S correctly but in this case how could the mental table be checked for its correctness It is a s if someone were to buy several copies of the morning paper to assure himself that what it said was true as Wittgenstein puts it 26 One common interpretation of the argument is that while one may have direct or privileged access to one s current mental states there is no such infallible access to identifying previous mental states that one had in the past That is the only way to check to see if one has applied the symbol S correctly to a certain mental state is to introspect and determine whether the current sensation is identical to the sensation previously associated with S And while identifying one s current mental state of remembering may be infallible whether one remembered correctly is not infallible Thus for a language to be used at all it must have some public criterion of identity Often what is widely regarded as a deep philosophical problem will vanish argues Wittgenstein and eventually be seen as a confusion about the significance of the words that philosophers use to frame such problems and questions It is only in this way that it is interesting to talk about something like a private language i e it is helpful to see how the problem results from a misunderstanding To sum up Wittgenstein asserts that if something is a language it cannot be logically private and if something is private it is not and cannot be a language Wittgenstein s beetle edit Another point that Wittgenstein makes against the possibility of a private language involves the beetle in a box thought experiment 27 He asks the reader to imagine that each person has a box inside which is something that everyone intends to refer to with the word beetle Further suppose that no one can look inside another s box and each claims to know what a beetle is only by examining their own box Wittgenstein suggests that in such a situation the word beetle could not be the name of a thing because supposing that each person has something completely different in their boxes or nothing at all does not change the meaning of the word the beetle as a private object drops out of consideration as irrelevant 27 Thus Wittgenstein argues if we can talk about something then it is not private in the sense considered And contrapositively if we consider something to be indeed private it follows that we cannot talk about it Mind edit Wittgenstein s investigations of language lead to several issues concerning the mind His key target of criticism is any form of extreme mentalism that posits mental states that are entirely unconnected to the subject s environment For Wittgenstein thought is inevitably tied to language which is inherently social Part of Wittgenstein s credo is captured in the following proclamation An inner process stands in need of outward criteria 28 This follows primarily from his conclusions about private languages similarly a private mental state a sensation of pain for example cannot be adequately discussed without public criteria for identifying it According to Wittgenstein those who insist that consciousness or any other apparently subjective mental state is conceptually unconnected to the external world are mistaken Wittgenstein explicitly criticizes so called conceivability arguments Could one imagine a stone s having consciousness And if anyone can do so why should that not merely prove that such image mongery is of no interest to us 29 He considers and rejects the following reply as well But if I suppose that someone is in pain then I am simply supposing that he has just the same as I have so often had That gets us no further It is as if I were to say You surely know what It is 5 o clock here means so you also know what It s 5 o clock on the sun means It means simply that it is just the same there as it is here when it is 5 o clock The explanation by means of identity does not work here 30 Thus according to Wittgenstein mental states are intimately connected to a subject s environment especially their linguistic environment and conceivability or imaginability Arguments that claim otherwise are misguided Seeing that vs seeing as edit nbsp The duck rabbit made famous by Wittgenstein In addition to ambiguous sentences Wittgenstein discussed figures that can be seen and understood in two different ways Often one can see something in a straightforward way seeing that it is a rabbit perhaps But at other times one notices a particular aspect seeing it as something An example Wittgenstein uses is the duckrabbit an ambiguous image that can be seen as either a duck or a rabbit 31 When one looks at the duck rabbit and sees a rabbit one is not interpreting the picture as a rabbit but rather reporting what one sees One just sees the picture as a rabbit But what occurs when one sees it first as a duck then as a rabbit As the gnomic remarks in the Investigations indicate Wittgenstein isn t sure However he is sure that it could not be the case that the external world stays the same while an internal cognitive change takes place Response and influence editBertrand Russell made the following comment on the Philosophical Investigations in his book My Philosophical Development I have not found in Wittgenstein s Philosophical Investigations anything that seemed to me interesting and I do not understand why a whole school finds important wisdom in its pages Psychologically this is surprising The earlier Wittgenstein whom I knew intimately was a man addicted to passionately intense thinking profoundly aware of difficult problems of which I like him felt the importance and possessed or at least so I thought of true philosophical genius The later Wittgenstein on the contrary seems to have grown tired of serious thinking and to have invented a doctrine which would make such an activity unnecessary I do not for one moment believe that the doctrine which has these lazy consequences is true I realize however that I have an overpoweringly strong bias against it for if it is true philosophy is at best a slight help to lexicographers and at worst an idle tea table amusement 32 Ernest Gellner wrote the book Words and Things in which he was fiercely critical of the work of Ludwig Wittgenstein J L Austin Gilbert Ryle Antony Flew P F Strawson and many others Ryle refused to have the book reviewed in the philosophical journal Mind which he edited and Bertrand Russell who had written an approving foreword protested in a letter to The Times A response from Ryle and a lengthy correspondence ensued 33 Besides stressing the differences between the Investigations and the Tractatus there are critical approaches which have argued that there is much more continuity and similarity between the two works than supposed One of these is the New Wittgenstein approach Kripkenstein edit The discussion of private languages was revitalized in 1982 with the publication of Kripke s book Wittgenstein on Rules and Private Language 34 In this work Kripke uses Wittgenstein s text to develop a particular type of skepticism about rules that stresses the communal nature of language use as grounding meaning 35 Critics of Kripke s version of Wittgenstein have facetiously referred to it as Kripkenstein 36 scholars such as Gordon Baker 37 Peter Hacker 37 Colin McGinn 38 and John McDowell 39 seeing it as a radical misinterpretation of Wittgenstein s text Other philosophers such as Martin Kusch have defended Kripke s views 40 Editions editPhilosophical Investigations was not ready for publication when Wittgenstein died in 1951 G E M Anscombe translated Wittgenstein s manuscript into English and it was first published in 1953 There are multiple editions of Philosophical Investigations with the popular third edition and 50th anniversary edition having been edited by Anscombe First Edition Blackwell Publishers 1953 ISBN 9780631103202 German English Edition translation by G E M Anscombe Second Edition Blackwell Publishers 1958 Third Edition Prentice Hall 1973 ISBN 0 02 428810 1 50th Anniversary Edition Blackwell Publishers 2001 ISBN 0 631 23127 7 This edition includes the original German text in addition to the English translation Fourth Edition Wiley Blackwell 2009 ISBN 978 1 4051 5928 9 This edition includes the original German text in addition to the English translation b See also edit nbsp Philosophy portal Prior s tonkNotes edit 97 quotation the order of possibilities which must be common to both world and thought must be utterly simple The first two editions 1953 and 1958 were Anscombe s text in the anniversary edition 2001 P M S Hacker and Joachim Schulte are also credited as translators The fourth edition 2009 was presented as a revision by Hacker and Schulte crediting Anscombe Hacker and Schulte as translators Remarks in Part I of Investigations are preceded by the symbol Remarks in Part II are referenced by their Roman numeral or their page number in the third edition Citations edit Wittgenstein 1953 Preface All citations will be from Wittgenstein 1953 unless otherwise noted Lackey Douglas P 1999 What Are the Modern Classics The Baruch Poll of Great Philosophy in the Twentieth Century The Philosophical Forum 30 4 329 346 doi 10 1111 0031 806X 00022 ISSN 1467 9191 a b Wittgenstein Ludwig 1953 Philosophical Investigations The German Text with a Revised English Translation Blackwell pp 23 ISBN 9780631231592 309 the original English translation used the word shew for show 77 Sedley D N 2003 Plato s Cratylus 7th ed Cambridge U K Cambridge University Press Jesus Padilla Galvez Philosophical Anthropology Wittgenstein s Perspective p 18 Nicholas Bunnin Jiyuan Yu 2008 The Blackwell Dictionary of Western Philosophy entry for anthropological holism p 34 Wittgenstein Ludwig 1953 Philosophical Investigations The German Text with a Revised English Translation Blackwell pp 1 ISBN 9780631231592 See 3 See 66 Wittgenstein PI Blackwell Publishers 2001 II xi p 190 See 26 34 Stern David G 2008 Wittgenstein s critique of referential theories of meaning and the paradox of ostension Philosophical Investigations 26 48 In Zamuner Edoardo Levy D K eds Wittgenstein s Enduring Arguments Routledge p 192 ISBN 9781134107063 See 66 71 Wittgenstein Ludwig 2001 Philosophical Investigations The German Text with a Revised English Translation 50th Anniversary Commemorative Edition Wiley 143 ISBN 9780631231592 54 See 201 Kripke Saul A 1982 Wittgenstein on Rules and Private Language An Elementary Exposition Harvard University Press p 7 ISBN 9780674954014 Wittgenstein Ludwig 2001 Philosophical Investigations The German Text with a Revised English Translation Blackwell 201 ISBN 9780631231592 Biletzki Anat Matar Anat 2018 Ludwig Wittgenstein in Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Summer 2018 ed Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University retrieved 2019 06 03 243 246 248 256 265 a b 293 580 390 350 Part II xi Russell Bertrand 1959 My Philosophical Development New York Allen amp Unwin pp 216 217 ISBN 0041920155 T P Uschanov The Strange Death of Ordinary Language Philosophy The controversy has been described by the writer Ved Mehta in Fly and the Fly Bottle Encounters with British Intellectuals 1963 Kripke Saul Wittgenstein on Rules and Private Language Basil Blackwell Publishing 1982 Stern 2004 2 7 Carrie Ichikawa Jenkins June 2011 Kripkenstein and the Cleverly Disguised Mules Analytic Philosophy 52 2 88 99 doi 10 1111 j 2153 960X 2011 00521 x a b Gordon Baker Peter Hacker March 1984 On Misunderstanding Wittgenstein Kripke s Private Language Argument Synthese 58 3 407 450 doi 10 1007 BF00485249 S2CID 46958320 Jane Heal July 1986 Wittgenstein Kripke and Meaning Review of Wittgenstein on Meaning by Colin McGinn The Philosophical Quarterly 36 144 412 414 416 418 doi 10 2307 2220196 JSTOR 2220196 John McDowell March 1984 Wittgenstein on Following a Rule Synthese 58 3 328 333 336 338 342 344 doi 10 1007 BF00485246 S2CID 46982326 Martin Kusch 2006 A Sceptical Guide to Meaning and Rules Defending Kripke s Wittgenstein Montreal McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 978 0773531666 References editWittgenstein Ludwig 2001 1953 Philosophical Investigations Blackwell Publishing ISBN 0 631 23127 7 Kripke Saul 1982 Wittgenstein on Rules and Private Language Basil Blackwell Publishing ISBN 0 631 13521 9 External links editThe first 100 remarks from Wittgenstein s Philosophical Investigations with Commentary by Lois Shawver archived 13 March 2016 Wittgenstein s Beetle description of the thought experiment from Philosophy Online archived 4 February 2012 As The Hammer Strikes in Fillip Original German text of the Philosophical Investigations at the Ludwig Wittgenstein Project Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Philosophical Investigations amp oldid 1220865711 Meaning as use, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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