-
86Rhees on the Unity of LanguagePhilosophical Investigations 35 (3-4): 224-237. 2012.Rush Rhees held Wittgenstein's work in high esteem but considered it in need of deepening. He was critical of Wittgenstein's idea that the builders' game might be the whole language of a tribe and that human language could be thought of as simply a range of language games. Rhees thought that Wittgenstein failed to do justice to the unity of language. The idea of the unity of language appears to have both an anthropological and an ethical aspect. The latter is illustrated with the help of a Hemin…Read more
-
68
-
47Hacker on Wittgenstein’s Ethnological ApproachIn Eric Lemaire & Jesús Padilla Gálvez (eds.), Wittgenstein: Issues and Debates, De Gruyter. pp. 117-126. 2010.
-
106Yaniv Iczkovits, Wittgenstein's Ethical Thought (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012). xi + 200, price £50.00 (review)Philosophical Investigations 36 (4): 381-384. 2013.
-
75Avner Baz, When Words are Called For: A Defense of Ordinary Language Philosophy , xv + 238 pp., price £28 (review)Philosophical Investigations 39 (1): 92-95. 2015.
-
1Rom Harre and Michael Krausz, Varieties of RelativismPhilosophical Investigations 22 197-202. 1999.
-
145Wittgenstein’s MetaphysicsPhilosophical Review 107 (1): 163. 1998.Which famous twentieth-century philosopher instigated a revolution in philosophy, arguing that the philosopher’s business is not to advance general theories about reality, but rather to help release our thinking from the intellectual cramps produced by a misunderstanding of the forms of language? Wittgenstein? Wrong! according to John W. Cook. This revolution in philosophy actually had no author. Apparently, it arose through a misinterpretation of Wittgenstein’s later writings. In fact, Cook imp…Read more
-
142The sense is where you find itIn Timothy McCarthy & Sean C. Stidd (eds.), Wittgenstein in America, Oxford University Press. pp. 90--102. 2001.
-
131Imagination and the sense of identityIn Human Beings, Cambridge University Press. pp. 143-155. 1991.Most of us, at one time or another, will have been struck by a thought that we might wish to express in the following words: ‘I could have been born in a different time and place, my position in life and all my personal characteristics could have been completely different from what they are; how amazing then that it should have fallen to my lot to live my life, the only life I shall ever live, as this particular individual rather than any other.’ This thought need not derive from a sense that th…Read more
-
58Review of Keith Dromm, Wittgenstein on Rules and Nature (review)Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2009 (7). 2009.
-
On Being NeighbourlyIn Dewi Zephaniah Phillips & John H. Whittaker (eds.), The possibilities of sense, Palgrave. pp. 24--38. 2002.
-
Very general facts of natureIn Oskari Kuusela & Marie McGinn (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Wittgenstein, Oxford University Press. 2011.
Turku, Finland