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And, as Wittgenstein says at 4.1212, "what can be shown, cannot be said." Any attempt to say something of the form "x is a concept" is an attempt to say ...
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Aug 19, 2024 · This digital edition is based on Project Gutenberg's Tractatus ... Wittgenstein. Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus, translated by F. P. ... 4.1212 What ...
Dec 13, 2021 · Mr Wittgenstein maintains that everything properly philosophical belongs to what can only be shown, to what is in common between a fact and its ...
Mr Wittgenstein maintains that everything properly philosophical belongs to what can only be shown, to what is in common between a fact and its logical picture.
Wittgenstein calls Sachverhalte, whereas a fact which may consist of two or more facts is a Tatsache: thus, for example “Socrates is wise” is a Sachverhalt, as ...
Wittgenstein's showing doctrine pre- sents a dichotomy within language between what can be said and what can only be shown (4.1212). Seen from the viewpoint of ...
Thus, when Wittgenstein claims that what can be shown cannot be said (4.1212), he does not mean a proposition or picture cannot be used to say something ...
Wittgenstein calls Sachverhalte, whereas a fact which may consist of two or more facts is a Tat- sache: thus, for example “Socrates is wise” is a Sachverhalt, ...
4.1212 What can be shown, cannot be said. 4.1213 Now, too, we understand our feeling that once we have a sign- language in which everything is all right, we ...
Apr 18, 2020 · Tractatus, 4.1212 What can be shown cannot be said. From the letter to Bertrand Russell (his first mentor in philosophy): “the main point is ...