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This is a new edition of the first volume of G.P.Baker and P.M.S.
Hacker's definitive reference work on Wittgenstein's
Philosophical Investigations.
Takes into account much material that was unavailable when the
first edition was written.
Following Baker's death in 2002, P.M.S. Hacker has
thoroughly revised the first volume, rewriting many essays and
sections of exegesis completely.
Part One - the Essays - now includes two completely new essays:
'Meaning and Use' and 'The Recantation of a Metaphysician'.
Part Two - Exegesis §§1-184 - has been thoroughly
revised in the light of the electronic publication of
Wittgenstein's Nachlass, and includes many new
interpretations of the remarks, a history of the composition of the
book, and an overview of its structure.
The revisions will ensure that this remains the definitive
reference work on Wittgenstein's masterpiece for the
foreseeable future.
Auteur
G.P. Baker was a Fellow of St John's College, Oxford from 1967 until his death in 2002. He is the co-author with P.M.S. Hacker of the first two volumes of the four-volume Analytical Commentary on the Philosophical Investigations (Blackwell, 198096), and with Katherine Morris of Descartes' Dualism (1996). He also wrote numerous articles on Wittgenstein, Frege, Russell, Waismann and Descartes.
P.M.S. Hacker is the leading authority on the philosophy of Wittgenstein. He is author of the four-volume Analytical Commentary on the Philosophical Investigations, the first two volumes co-authored with G.P. Baker, (Blackwell, 198096) and of Wittgenstein's Place in Twentieth-century Analytic Philosophy (Blackwell, 1996). He has also written extensively on philosophy of language and philosophy of mind, most recently The Philosophical Foundations of Neuroscience (Blackwell, 2003), co-authored with M.R. Bennett.
Texte du rabat
Published to widespread acclaim between 1980 and 1996, the monumental four- volume Analytical Commentary on the Philosophical Investigations has become the definitive reference work on Wittgenstein's masterpiece. This revised edition of Volume I, Wittgenstein: Understanding and Meaning, which itself comprises two parts ('Essays' and 'Exegesis §§1184'), takes into account much material that was unavailable when the first edition was written. Following G.P. Baker's death in 2002, P.M.S. Hacker has thoroughly revised both parts, rewriting many sections completely and often proposing fresh interpretations. Part I: Essays now includes two new essays: 'Meaning and Use' and 'The Recantation of a Metaphysician', while Part II: Exegesis §§1**184 has been exhaustively reworked in the light of the electronic publication of Wittgenstein's Nachlass. These revisions will ensure that this remains the essential reference work on the Philosophical Investigations for the foreseeable future.
Résumé
This is a new edition of the first volume of G.P.Baker and P.M.S. Hacker's definitive reference work on Wittgenstein's Philosophical Investigations.
New edition of the first volume of the monumental four-volume Analytical Commentary on the Philosophical Investigations.
Takes into account much material that was unavailable when the first edition was written.
Following Baker's death in 2002, P.M.S. Hacker has thoroughly revised the first volume, rewriting many essays and sections of exegesis completely.
Part One - the Essays - now includes two completely new essays: 'Meaning and Use' and 'The Recantation of a Metaphysician'.
Part Two - Exegesis §§1-184 - has been thoroughly revised in the light of the electronic publication of Wittgenstein's Nachlass, and includes many new interpretations of the remarks, a history of the composition of the book, and an overview of its structure.
The revisions will ensure that this remains the definitive reference work on Wittgenstein's masterpiece for the foreseeable future.
Contenu
Acknowledgements xi
Introduction to Part I: Essays xiii
Abbreviations xix
I The Augustinian conception of language ( 1) 1
Augustine's picture 1
The Augustinian family 4
(a) word-meaning 4
(b) correlating words with meanings 6
(c) ostensive explanation 7
(d) metapsychological corollaries 9
(e) sentence-meaning 11
Moving off in new directions 14
Frege 19
Russell 23
The Tractatus 26
II Explanation ( 6) 29
Training, teaching and explaining 29
Explanation and meaning 33
Explanation and grammar 35
Explanation and understanding 39
III The language-game method ( 7) 45
The emergence of the game analogy 45
An intermediate phase: comparisons with invented calculi 54
The emergence of the language-game method 57
Invented language-games 61
Natural language-games 63
IV Descriptions and the uses of sentences (§18) 65
Flying in the face of the facts 65
Sentences as descriptions of facts: surface-grammatical paraphrase 67
Sentences as descriptions: depth-grammatical analysis and descriptive contents 70
Sentences as instruments 73
Assertions, questions, commands make contact in language 76
V Ostensive definition and its ramifications (§28) 81
Connecting language and reality 81
The range and limits of ostensive explanations 83
The normativity of ostensive definition 88
Samples 92
Misunderstandings resolved 97
Samples and simples 103
VI Indexicals (§39) 107
VII Logically proper names (§39) 113
Russell 113
The Tractatus 117
The criticisms of the Investigations: assailing the motivation 120
The criticisms of the Investigations: real proper names and simple names 124
VIII Meaning and use (§43) 129
The concept of meaning 129
Setting the stage 136
Wittgenstein: meaning and its internal relations 144
Qualifications 152
IX Contextual dicta and contextual principles (§50) 159
The problems of a principle 159
Frege 164
The Tractatus 170
After the Tractatus 171
Compositional theories of meaning 173
Computational theories of understanding 181
X The standard metre (§50) 189
The rudiments of measurement 189
The standard metre and canonical samples 192
Fixing the reference or explaining the meaning? 193
Defusing paradoxes 197
XI Family resemblance (§65) 201
Background: definition, logical constituents and analysis 201
Family resemblance: precursors and anticipations 208
Family resemblance: a minimalist interpretation 212
Sapping the defences of orthodoxy 216
Problems about family-resemblance concepts 219
Psychological concepts 222
Formal concepts 224
XII Proper names (§79) 227
Stage-setting 227
Frege and Russell: simple abbreviation theories 230
Cluster theories of proper names 233
Some general principles 235
Some critical consequences 238
The significance of proper names 239
Proper names and meaning 244
XIII Turning the examination around: the recantation of a metaphysician (§89) 251
Reorienting the investigation 251
The sublime vision 253
Diagnosis: projecting the mode of representation on to what is represented 256
Idealizing the prototype 259