•  287
    Stanley Cavell’s Wittgenstein
    The Harvard Review of Philosophy 13 (1): 50-64. 2005.
    Now Wittgenstein has become quite famous in recent years for putting forward something that gets called a “use-theory of meaning.” Wittgenstein writes.
  •  16
    Karl Ameriks, ed. The Cambridge Companion to German Idealism
    with Henry Hardy, Stefano Bertolini, Marshall Brown, David Cannadine, Gianni Celati, Marianne Classon, Cairns Craig, and Susan Crane
    The European Legacy 7 (3): 421-423. 2002.
  •  686
    Wittgenstein gives voice to an aspiration that is central to his later philosophy, well before he becomes later Wittgenstein, when he writes in §4.112 of the Tractatus that philosophy is not a matter of putting forward a doctrine or a theory, but consists rather in the practice of an activity – an activity he goes on to characterize as one of elucidation or clarification – an activity which he says does not result in philosophische Sätze, in propositions of philosophy, but rather in das Klarwerd…Read more
  •  6
    Three Philosophers: Kierkegaard, Nietzsche and James
    Dissertation, Harvard University. 1991.
    1. Kierkegaard on saying and showing. The paper explores certain parallels between Kierkegaard's Concluding Unscientific Postscript and Wittgenstein's Tractatus. The following five parallels appear to exist between these two works: both draw a distinction between sense and nonsense; both distinguish between what can be said and what can only be shown; both aspire to show what cannot be said by drawing limits to what can be said; both end by retracting themselves; both imply that silence is the o…Read more