Wittgenstein's Tractatus

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 25. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 91

  • @septillionsuns
    @septillionsuns Před 6 měsíci +3

    When you understand the evolution of language on an instinctual level, the Tractatus opens like a miracle. It approaches Buddhism in its intense clarity and really brings immanence into philosophy.

  • @vivid5591
    @vivid5591 Před 11 měsíci +21

    subarashiki hibi

    • @ArcaneAria
      @ArcaneAria Před měsícem

      Guilty. Was just starting to read the original Tsui no Sora and was blasted by this and Kant, had to search for some videos to explain it in a clear way. Will have to watch this video a couple times, but was a great intro to the topic!

    • @Phoslin
      @Phoslin Před 28 dny

      fever dream

  • @F3z07
    @F3z07 Před rokem +3

    Neat video! I have always skipped to the end of Tractatus! 😅 You've earned a subscriber!

    • @AtticPhilosophy
      @AtticPhilosophy  Před rokem +1

      Thanks! There's lots of magic (as well as deeply confusing stuff) in the middle

  • @georgeoshea9961
    @georgeoshea9961 Před 9 dny

    This is quite brilliant. I read Tractatus years ago and read Graylings analysis of it - this is far better than his book, to say, it shows far more understanding of what Wittgenstein’s intentions were in writing this thesis.

    • @georgeoshea9961
      @georgeoshea9961 Před 9 dny

      Also, thanks for mentioning Ramsay because if it wasn’t for him, Wittgenstein would have ‘completed philosophy’ and we would never have seen his later work - and, I might be wrong here, but didn’t Ramsay refer to a theory of colour to ‘disprove’ Tractatus?

    • @AtticPhilosophy
      @AtticPhilosophy  Před 5 dny

      Yes, there's so much to say about Ramsay's contribution to this period of philosophy. The recent Cheryl Misak book on Ramsey is brilliant.

  • @user-tt6jl2fs1k
    @user-tt6jl2fs1k Před rokem +3

    Great video! I'll be glad to see another one like this but on his other famous work - Philosophical investigations

    • @AtticPhilosophy
      @AtticPhilosophy  Před rokem +2

      Thanks! Way too much in PI for one video, I'm hoping to pick up on some of the main topics: private language, meaning as use, sensations, etc.

  • @modernoverman
    @modernoverman Před 3 měsíci +2

    I actually just finished reading the Tractatus a couple of weeks ago, and I found it far easier to understand than some other works, like Hegel or Satre. Not to say this video is unnecessary, but Wittgenstein is refreshingly clear.

    • @mridul321go
      @mridul321go Před 3 měsíci

      what are you talking about mate? he never explains what he means by his words or how he came to those conclusions

  • @flambr
    @flambr Před 11 měsíci +3

    literally every lecturer I have ever interacted with regarding this damn book: actually, it's a lot more complicated than that

  • @davidtrindle6473
    @davidtrindle6473 Před 22 dny

    Excellent, excellent teaching style!!

  • @rmzkip
    @rmzkip Před měsícem +1

    1.5 playback speed works for me!

  • @tonysandy7803
    @tonysandy7803 Před 8 měsíci +1

    This sounds a bit like the way the founder of The Samaritans, Chad Varah, discovered what his organisations purpose was, when a woman visited him again and again, repeating something she was trying to get straight in her head. Every repetition made is clearer in her head what the problem (confusion) was in her head, until eventually she knew exactly what it was she meant at which point she left and never came back. As he said himself about it, he never did or said anything to the woman, just gave her space to clarify what was going through her head

  • @andrewcrowder4958
    @andrewcrowder4958 Před 6 měsíci

    Thank you for this path into the small dense thicket that is the TLP.

  • @zhylkos
    @zhylkos Před rokem +5

    Amazing video! CZcams algorithm really did a good job for me today

  • @noedenisquentindodson2977
    @noedenisquentindodson2977 Před 10 měsíci +7

    By “meaningless” I think he meant to question the concept itself of “meaning”. What is “meaningless” isn’t necessarily “useless”.

    • @AtticPhilosophy
      @AtticPhilosophy  Před 10 měsíci +1

      He was giving a theory of meaning, so not questioning whether *any* sentence is meaningful - but it turns out, on his theory, that many sentences are meaningless. As he says, ethical & theological sentences may have a purpose, but aren’t meaningful.

    • @noedenisquentindodson2977
      @noedenisquentindodson2977 Před 10 měsíci +4

      I believe we are « saying the same thing ».

  • @eliad6543
    @eliad6543 Před 4 měsíci +1

    That he was willing to put himself out there despite noting his self-contradiction, instead of waiting forever to be perfect before doing anything infront of the eyes of another. That's quite meaningless by his standards, but very admirable nonetheless and something we could all learn from.

    • @AtticPhilosophy
      @AtticPhilosophy  Před 3 měsíci +1

      Wittgenstein didn't lack confidence! I'm not sure people insisting they're right, even though their ideas are contradictory, is always a good thing.

  • @johnchatz
    @johnchatz Před rokem +1

    YESMore Wittgenstein please! It would be interesting to know what did he contribute to modern logic.I think truth tables was kinda his invention,

    • @AtticPhilosophy
      @AtticPhilosophy  Před rokem

      OK! Yes truth-tables, although these also come from a number of places (Post, Russell, and maybe Peirce). W also links these to probabilities (around 5.15), and the idea that p and q are (or express) the same proposition when each entails the other - that's an influential view in modal logic & Phil language.

  • @lunct5211
    @lunct5211 Před rokem +1

    Can you briefly comment on the mystical/theological interpretations of the Tractatus?

  • @urbangames9180
    @urbangames9180 Před 3 měsíci

    Watching this before my Wittgenstein Tractatus exam, let's hope this will go well...

    • @CompassionateCoos
      @CompassionateCoos Před 3 měsíci

      how did it go?

    • @urbangames9180
      @urbangames9180 Před 3 měsíci

      @@CompassionateCoos i think it went well, I’ll have the results somewhere before Wednesday.

  • @frankavocado
    @frankavocado Před rokem +3

    Another excellent, clear, concise overview of a hugely complex topic. A lot of the saying/showing, meaningful/meaningless dichotomy of the Tractatus depends on the limitations of the picture (I prefer 'model') theory of meaning. If a model cannot describe its own state of representation, and this is what the Tractatus is trying to do, then all we can do is throw away the ladder. But, modal logic adds multiple possible worlds to the mix. So now, a model cannot describe its own state of representation in its own world. But from the perspective of another possible world, we can describe the original state of representation. So it's models all the way down, until we run into an actual state of affairs, somewhere ... possibly.

    • @AtticPhilosophy
      @AtticPhilosophy  Před rokem

      Thanks! Although this wasn't W's argument, there is a general feeling that a model can't describe too much of its own modelling, else you get paradoxes (like the Liar, if you internalise how the model treats sentences as true or false + use classical logic).

  • @paulyoung9578
    @paulyoung9578 Před rokem +1

    So love the topics, and made this philosophical theory very accessible, but honestly you looking just below the camera and not at it, really throws me off.
    I know it’s small but I feel that finding a way to look right at the camera will really help bring these videos home and more attention by your audience (IMHO)

  • @johncrwarner
    @johncrwarner Před rokem +9

    I read
    (with a guide - I have to say)
    the Tractatus when I was seventeen
    and applying to university
    (and thanks to the Vice-Master of
    University College, Durham for recommending some key texts)
    I have read and re-read it multiple times
    I find it like a highly faceted jewel
    if you turn it slightly
    you see another aspect of his thinking.
    My believe is it is best read as an expanding website
    where you start with the seven propositions
    and you navigate around each layer
    I think of it like a tree diagram.
    BTW I know Wittgenstein did write things on index cards
    but the later Investigations
    does read like a Zettelkasten.
    One of my ideas in my retirement is to
    take the Philosophical Investigations
    and turn it into a full blown electronic Zettelkasten.

    • @AtticPhilosophy
      @AtticPhilosophy  Před rokem +1

      That’s a great way to think of the structure. I think W would like that too.

    • @johncrwarner
      @johncrwarner Před rokem

      @@AtticPhilosophy
      Well his initial training was in engineering
      and he came to the UK
      to study the new science
      of aeronautics at Manchester.

  • @NyleGames
    @NyleGames Před rokem +1

    (I think this question/statement could just be rephrasing stuff you’ve already said, but nonetheless I want to ask!)
    If philosophy produces nonsense, surely the Tractatus can only hope of proving that philosophy is sensical? If it does prove philosophy is sensical we can put the question to rest. If it doesn’t, we can only keep searching to see if we can prove it’s sensical.
    The Tractatus is excavating a cavern, defining the edges of what language can do, but our excavation can neither strike gold (find philosophy as sensical) or collapse on us (kick the ladder away), unless we believe it has. Doesn’t this mean the Tractatus has a subjective, dare I say it Idealistic quality or flavour?

    • @AtticPhilosophy
      @AtticPhilosophy  Před rokem +1

      The TLP isn’t trying to find sense in philosophy, the whole point (in the standard reading) is that philosophy itself is nonsense, but by going through the process, can show us something important.

  • @lunct5211
    @lunct5211 Před rokem +1

    Really enjoyed the video.
    But it seems so bizarre to me that Wittgenstein says the Tractatus is meaningless. Does it not build up its own picture? By describing what meaning is, does it not points towards a state of affairs of how the world is?

    • @AtticPhilosophy
      @AtticPhilosophy  Před rokem +1

      Not according to Wittgenstein, who (in the Tractatus) thought of meaning and logic as “outside the world”, somehow unsayable and beyond meaningful theorizing.

  • @flatboyashaf
    @flatboyashaf Před 11 měsíci +1

    Excellent video mate

    • @AtticPhilosophy
      @AtticPhilosophy  Před 11 měsíci

      Thanks! So You might like the one I’ve got coming tomorrow, on Bertrand Russell

  • @jakethecake3657
    @jakethecake3657 Před 11 měsíci

    Thank you for taking the time to break this down. Excellent video!

  • @willieluncheonette5843
    @willieluncheonette5843 Před 6 měsíci

    "This is for the real adepts in madness, who have gone beyond all psychiatry, psychoanalysis, who are unhelpable. This third book is again the work of a German, Ludwig Wittgenstein. Just listen to its title: TRACTATUS LOGICO PHILOSOPHICUS. We will just call it TRACTATUS. It is one of the most difficult books in existence. Even a man like G.E.Moore, a great English philosopher, and
    Bertrand Russell, another great philosopher - not only English but a philosopher of the whole world - both agreed that this man Wittgenstein was far superior to them both.
    Ludwig Wittgenstein was really a lovable man. I don't hate him, but I don't dislike him. I like him and I love him, but not his book. His book is only gymnastics. Only once in a while after pages and pages you may come across a sentence which is luminous. For example: That which cannot be spoken should not be spoken; one should be silent about it. Now this is a beautiful statement. Even saints, mystics, poets, can learn much from this sentence. That which cannot be spoken must not be spoken of.
    Wittgenstein writes in a mathematical way, small sentences, not even paragraphs - sutras. But for the very advanced insane man this book can be of immense help. It can hit him exactly in his soul, not only in the head. Just like a nail it can penetrate into his very being. That may wake him from his nightmare.
    Ludwig Wittgenstein was a lovable man. He was offered one of the most cherished chairs of philosophy at Oxford. He declined. That's what I love in him. He went to become a farmer and fisherman. This is lovable in the man. This is more existential than Jean-Paul Sartre, although Wittgenstein never talked of existentialism. Existentialism, by the way, cannot be talked about; you have to live it, there is no other way.
    This book was written when Wittgenstein was studying under G.E.Moore and Bertrand Russell.
    Two great philosophers of Britain, and a German... it was enough to create TRACTATUS LOGICO PHILOSOPHICUS. Translated it means Wittgenstein, Moore and Russell. I, on my part, would rather have seen Wittgenstein sitting at the feet of Gurdjieff than studying with Moore and Russell. That was the right place for him, but he missed. Perhaps next time, I mean next life... for him, not for me. For me this is enough, this is the last. But for him, at least once he needs to be in the company of a man like Gurdjieff or Chuang Tzu, Bodhidharma - but not Moore, Russell, not Whitehead. He was associating with these people, the wrong people. A right man in the company of wrong people, that's what destroyed him.
    My experience is, in the right company even a wrong person becomes right, and vice-versa: in a wrong company, even a right person becomes wrong. But this only applies to unenlightened men, right or wrong, both. An enlightened person cannot be influenced. He can associate with anyone - Jesus with Magdalena, a prostitute; Buddha with a murderer, a murderer who had killed nine hundred and ninety-nine people. He had taken a vow to kill one thousand people, and he was going to kill Buddha too; that's how he came into contact with Buddha.
    The murderer's name is not known. The name people gave to him was Angulimala, which means 'the man who wears a garland of fingers'. That was his way. He would kill a man, cut off his fingers and put them on his garland, just to keep count of the number of people he had killed. Only ten fingers were missing to make up the thousand; in other words only one man more.... Then Buddha appeared. He was just moving on that road from one village to another. Angulimala shouted, "Stop!"
    Buddha said, "Great. That's what I have been telling people: Stop! But, my friend, who listens?"
    Angulimala looked amazed: Is this man insane? And Buddha continued walking towards Angulimala. Angulimala again shouted, "Stop! It seems you don't know that I am a murderer,
    and I have taken a vow to kill one thousand people. Even my own mother has stopped seeing me, because only one person is missing.... I will kill you... but you look so beautiful that if you stop and turn back I may not kill you."
    Buddha said, "Forget about it. I have never turned back in my life, and as far as stopping is concerned, I stopped forty years ago; since then there is nobody left to move. And as far as killing me is concerned, you can do it anyway. Everything born is going to die."
    Angulimala saw the man, fell at his feet, and was transformed. Angulimala could not change Buddha, Buddha changed Angulimala. Magdalena the prostitute could not change Jesus, but Jesus changed the woman.
    So what I said is only applicable to so-called ordinary humanity, it is not applicable to those who are awakened. Wittgenstein can become awakened; he could have become awakened even in this life.
    Alas, he associated with wrong company. But his book can be of great help to those who are really third-degree insane. If they can make any sense out of it, they will come back to sanity."

  • @matepenava5888
    @matepenava5888 Před rokem

    A nice video about a majestic book, though I am not that resolute about your resolute interpretation of the TLP.

  • @nilton61
    @nilton61 Před 3 měsíci

    How would things be if Wittgenstein had access to category theory?

    • @AtticPhilosophy
      @AtticPhilosophy  Před 2 měsíci

      Who knows? But my guess is that his views would have been roughly the same.

    • @nilton61
      @nilton61 Před 2 měsíci

      @@AtticPhilosophy Probably, imo it might have added something

  • @rickevans7941
    @rickevans7941 Před rokem

    I'm hearing Wolfram's Hypergraph :)

  • @eamonnleonard9162
    @eamonnleonard9162 Před 14 dny

    The totally of reality is THOUGHT, because without thought we cannot bring our realitys into existence. Now I could go a step further, and say that without the facility of mind then we would not be able to experience this thing we call our realitys. Funny isn't it even that is just a thought.

    • @AtticPhilosophy
      @AtticPhilosophy  Před 14 dny

      Wasn’t there reality before any thinking creatures?

    • @eamonnleonard9162
      @eamonnleonard9162 Před 12 dny

      Thank you for your reply, you pose a very good question. But isn't it your facility of thought that brings your question into your stream of consciousness "reality"?.
      So in other words it is through your facility of thought that you are creating your reality, in other words the experience of reality "life" is an inside out experience rather than an outside in experience. This is true for all of us, and the wonderful thing about that is, it allows us to claim responsibility for our experience of life.
      Kind regards Eamonn Leonard.

  • @Heymansupp
    @Heymansupp Před 6 dny

    is your house still the second house after the lights?

  • @8k35Philosophy
    @8k35Philosophy Před rokem

    Nice🎉🎉

  • @thefrenchareharlequins2743
    @thefrenchareharlequins2743 Před 6 měsíci

    Early Wittgenstein or Late Wittgenstein?

  • @jolenej3224
    @jolenej3224 Před rokem

    Perfect explanation. Thank you 🎉

  • @michaelsteven1090
    @michaelsteven1090 Před 7 měsíci

    ...and this philosophy of Wittegenstein helps us how?

  • @eamonnleonard9162
    @eamonnleonard9162 Před 10 měsíci

    Is a fact not just a thought, so is there anything that is not thought? and if it were not for my facility of mind would I even be able to make that up?
    And is that not just another thought.

    • @AtticPhilosophy
      @AtticPhilosophy  Před 10 měsíci

      For Wittgenstein, a fact is an entity in the world, not in the mind. Thoughts correspond to facts in the world, but aren't the same. It's a reasonable view: there would be facts (e.g., that Everest is taller than Snowdon, that 2+2=4, etc) even if there were no people around to have any thoughts.

    • @eamonnleonard9162
      @eamonnleonard9162 Před 10 měsíci

      @@AtticPhilosophy thank you for your reply, I have a question, Is there anything in the world that is not a manifestation of mind?
      Another question, is it not our minds that allows us to have this experience that we call life "ie our realitys".
      And having come this far can we explore the possibility that life is an inside out experience rather than an outside in experience.
      Kind regards Eamonn Leonard.

  • @bassafarside6071
    @bassafarside6071 Před měsícem +1

    I have long thought the quote " ... must be silent" is some of the worst Philosophy out there. It is the kind of argument a US Trumputin Republican would say. WHAT is it allegedly that we cannot speak about? WHY can we not speak of it? I think good Philosophy should be able to speak about anything and everything, if only to show how absurdly wrong it is. Wittgenstein comes up short in the Tractatus (yes, I have read it).

    • @AtticPhilosophy
      @AtticPhilosophy  Před měsícem +1

      According to Wittgenstein, certain topics aren’t meaningful - metaphysics, theology, aesthetics. So we can’t meaningfully say anything in those areas. Nothing to do with Trump (thankfully)! I’m not saying W is right, but it’s bizarre to think it isn’t serious philosophy.

    • @bassafarside6071
      @bassafarside6071 Před měsícem

      @@AtticPhilosophy it's a serious thought, yes, but itself engages in mystification by sweeping asserting s "don't talk about it" prohibition without talking clearly about why such things "cannot" beyalked about. "BECAUSE THEY ARE NONSENSICAL". but why, WHY arete

    • @bassafarside6071
      @bassafarside6071 Před měsícem

      Why are they nonsensical? That is the thesis. I would like more explanation why the thesis Is true...

    • @AtticPhilosophy
      @AtticPhilosophy  Před měsícem

      @@bassafarside6071 That's basically what the Tractates is about. It's a theory of meaning, a consequence of which is that certain sentences aren't meaningful. Very roughly, meaning arises through correspondence with worldly facts in logical space. They are roughly the empirical facts. Logical truths are the limits of meaning. Beyond that, eg metaphysics, is meaninglessness.

    • @bassafarside6071
      @bassafarside6071 Před měsícem

      @@AtticPhilosophy I agree with you that that is the thesis. It is also good enough for dealing with the MAGA followers. But the thesis was already advanced by Kant and he attempts to explain when something is a "fact", which certainly is anything but clear. Kant's explantation may very well be inadequate, but he takes up Hume, Berkeley and Locke in his attempt. What is Wittgenstein's? Does it collapse into the British empiricists? As for logic, Kant accepted it as a given but I think it has become clear that logic inheres in the linguistic model and always requires "interpretation" to permit statements about the "world out there" (Gesellschaft, Esther, Ba h and my first year logic Prof in 1980. Finally, do logic and mathematics maje statements about what "is out there" or are they meaningful statements in construction of a tool for modelling? Those are the questions thar are open, I think. Wittgenstein made a contribution no doubt to getting us to the current forefront but his famous final words are just too programmatic and I think can be misused. Thus my reaction.

  • @remihudson1237
    @remihudson1237 Před rokem

    thankyou for the great video

  • @davidtrindle6473
    @davidtrindle6473 Před 22 dny

    He recognized that human language is a hopeless mishmash incapable of being useful to Philosophy. He then tried, unsuccessfully, to construct a useful language as a tool for studying philosophy

  • @bogohotdogz
    @bogohotdogz Před 6 měsíci +1

    tractatus is baffling? Your hair is baffling.

  • @Three-Chord-Trick
    @Three-Chord-Trick Před 6 měsíci

    If you don't know what you're talking about, keep your mouth shut.
    What's baffling about that?

    • @AtticPhilosophy
      @AtticPhilosophy  Před 6 měsíci +2

      That's not what Wittgenstein is saying. Rather, it's about what he takes to be unsayable (by anyone).

    • @OnceTheyNamedMeiWasnt
      @OnceTheyNamedMeiWasnt Před 5 měsíci

      Perhaps that you don't...

  • @bluelines2924
    @bluelines2924 Před rokem

    I've never been convinced by Wittgenstein. A case of the emperor's new clothes for the most part.

  • @KnowledgeVariable
    @KnowledgeVariable Před 11 měsíci

    notice me senpai.