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Paperback Wittgenstein's Conception of Philosophy Book

ISBN: 1482832283

ISBN13: 9781482832280

Wittgenstein's Conception of Philosophy

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Format: Paperback

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Book Overview

"WITTGENSTEIN'S CONCEPTION OF PHILOSOPHY" was first published in 1969 by Basil Blackwell Publishers, the official publisher of Wittgenstein's works. It was intended to be a clear and concise introduction to Wittgenstein's whole philosophy that corrects many basic misunderstandings of Wittgenstein at the time. After all these years, many scholars still regard it as the best introduction to Wittgenstein. We are reprinting this book and making it available...

Customer Reviews

2 ratings

Perfect Introduction to L.W.

I picked this up on a lark at a used bookstore when I was a philosophy undergrad at Berkeley. I picked it because it was the cheapest L.W. book on the rack (I think I paid $3 for it), and it literally changed the course of my studies. I was lucky to stumble on such a clear presentation of Wittgenstein out of sheer frugality. Having since read many other expositions of the man and almost all of L.W.'s own work, I think this is the best introduction to Wittgenstein, especially early "tractarian" Wittgenstein. Great Primer. For those interested in his life and times, Ray Monk's "The Duty of Genius" is a good read, but as far as establishing familiarity with Wittgenstein's conceptual framework goes this is best game in town.

Excellent Addition to the Field

I bought this 30 years ago and never got round to reading it . . . until a couple of weeks ago when I began to become interested in Wittgenstein's work again! Fann offers a very perceptive and articulate reading of Wittgenstein here, covering his early philosophy, as seen in the Tractatus, through to the Philosophical Investigations, the man's last work that he actually intended for publication, though he never quite completed it (and so it had to be published posthumously).Many have been stymied and confused by the oddity of this philosopher, a man who produced so influential a work in his early years (the Tractatus Logico Philosophicus) and then, throwing it all over and seemingly starting again, went on to offer an even more influential work (the Investigations). In the early part of the twentieth century, Wittgenstein was the patron saint of the logical positivists, who formed the Vienna Circle, and the inspiration for the later linguistic analysts and ordinary language philosophers who came after and replaced the verificationists from Vienna. Moreover he has spawned many latter day Wittgensteinians who religiously invoke the somewhat abstruse ideas of his later work.Fann manages to show, in clear and simple terms, how his two great works connect and how Wittgenstein's thinking changed and why. In the process he makes the case for a more poetical, almost metaphysical, reading of the man's later philosophy and shows how Wittgenstein's work revolved around an idea of philosophy that, while advocating the shattering of intellectual confusions that manifested as puzzles, was still more than that. Contrary to a superficial reading of some of Wittgenstein's later, almost polemical, claims about how philosophical problems aren't really problems at all, Fann shows that Wittgenstein may not have meant this as simplistically as it often sounds. Indeed, the man himself did philosophy until the day he died and so it is not unreasonable to assume that he thought he was doing more than working through mere puzzles. The idea of the puzzle, like his ideas of "language games," "forms of life" and "grammar," was a good deal deeper and more important than the simple words he used often seem to suggest.Indeed, I was sorry I left Fann's book unread for 30 years since his insights into Wittgenstein and his philosophy are among the most edifying I've found. Wittgenstein's place as a metaphysician, albeit a new kind, is sketched out here. If you are interested in Wittgenstein and you want to get a better handle on the man's extremely subtle and profound thought, Fann's book is an excellent place to start.SWM
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