Foreword |
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xi | |
Preface to the Revised Edition |
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xv | |
Preface to the First Edition |
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xix | |
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xiii | |
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I WITTGENSTEIN'S EARLY CONCEPTION OF PHILOSOPHY |
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1 | (11) |
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2 The `Preliminary' on Philosophy |
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12 | (3) |
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3 Philosophy and Illusion |
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15 | (7) |
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4 Philosophy as Critique and as Analysis |
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22 | (6) |
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II THE DIALOGUE WITH FREGE AND RUSSELL |
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1 Agreements and Disagreements |
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28 | (6) |
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2 The Grundgedanke of the Tractatus |
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34 | (8) |
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42 | (8) |
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4 A Prelude to Conventionalism |
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50 | (6) |
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III MEANING, METAPHYSICS, AND THE MIND |
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1 The Picture Theory of Meaning |
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56 | (9) |
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2 The Metaphysics of the Tractatus |
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65 | (8) |
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3 Connecting Language with Reality: the role of the mind |
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73 | (8) |
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IV EMPIRICAL REALISM AND TRANSCENDENTAL SOLIPSISM |
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81 | (9) |
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90 | (10) |
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3 `The limits of language means the limits of my world' |
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100 | (4) |
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104 | (4) |
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V DISINTEGRATION AND RECONSTRUCTION |
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1 The Colour-Exclusion Problem |
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108 | (5) |
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2 Dismantling the Tractatus |
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113 | (7) |
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120 | (8) |
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4 Moving off in Fresh Directions |
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128 | (6) |
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5 The Vienna Circle and Wittgenstein's Principle of Verification |
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134 | (12) |
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VI WITTGENSTEIN'S LATER CONCEPTION OF PHILOSOPHY |
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1 A Kink in the Evolution of Philosophy |
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146 | (5) |
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2 A Cure for the Sickness of the Understanding |
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151 | (5) |
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3 Philosophy, Science, and Description |
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156 | (5) |
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4 Philosophy and Ordinary Language |
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161 | (4) |
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5 The Phenomenology and Sources of Philosophical Illusion |
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165 | (10) |
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175 | (4) |
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VII METAPHYSICS AS THE SHADOW OF GRAMMAR |
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179 | (6) |
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2 The Autonomy of Grammar |
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185 | (8) |
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3 Grammar and Metaphysics |
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193 | (13) |
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4 A Note on Kant and Wittgenstein |
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206 | (9) |
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VIII THE REFUTATION OF SOLIPSISM |
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215 | (3) |
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2 From Transcendental Solipsism to Methodological Solipsism |
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218 | (8) |
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3 The Solipsist's Predicament: a restatement and second diagnosis |
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226 | (3) |
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229 | (16) |
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IX PRIVATE LINGUISTS AND PUBLIC SPEAKERS |
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1 A Disease of the Intellect |
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245 | (2) |
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247 | (4) |
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3 Philosophical Investigations, §243 |
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251 | (4) |
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255 | (6) |
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5 The Epistemology of the Private Linguist |
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261 | (3) |
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6 Wittgenstein's Criticism of the Private Language |
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264 | (8) |
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7 `Only I Know' and `Only I have' |
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272 | (4) |
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X `A CLOUD OF PHILOSOPHY CONDENSED INTO A DROP OF GRAMMAR' |
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1 Can one know that one is in pain? |
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276 | (2) |
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2 Self-consciousness: the overthrow of the Cartesian picture |
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278 | (6) |
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3 The `Inner' and the `Outer' |
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284 | (7) |
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4 Experience and its Natural Expression |
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291 | (6) |
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5 Avowals and Descriptions |
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297 | (5) |
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6 Objections and Deflections |
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302 | (5) |
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XI CRITERIA, REALISM AND ANTI-REALISM |
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1 The Origins of the Idea |
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307 | (3) |
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2 Plotting the Contour-lines |
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310 | (8) |
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318 | (4) |
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4 Red Herrings: realism and anti-realism |
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322 | (15) |
Index |
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337 | |