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    Wittgenstein on Perspicuous Presentations and Grammatical Self-Knowledge
    Nordic Wittgenstein Review 5 (1): 79-108. 2016.
    The task of this paper is to exhibit Wittgenstein’s method of perspicuous presentation as aiming at a distinctive kind of self-knowledge. Three influential readings of Wittgenstein’s concept of perspicuous presentation – Hacker’s, Baker’s and Sluga’s – are examined. All of them present what Wittgenstein calls the “unsurveyablity of our grammar” as a result of the “complexity” of our language. Contrary to this, a fundamental difference between matter-of-factual complexity and the unsurveyability …Read more
  •  31
    Four Types of Conceptual Generality
    Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 36 (2): 397-423. 2015.
  •  28
    Hegel und Sellars über sprachliches Regelfolgen
    Hegel-Jahrbuch 19 (1): 291-296. 2013.
  •  32
    Hegel on Judgements and Posits
    Hegel Bulletin 37 (1): 53-80. 2016.
    Hegel draws a distinction between ‘judgements’ and ‘posits’. Judgements serve to explicate a unified subject matter, while posits do not. Because different forms of judgement are marked by specific combinations of logical constants with certain types of predicates, statements combining logical constants with predicates not ‘suited’ for each other cannot express judgements, but only posits. Current accounts of Hegel’s concept of judgement tend either to ignore or reject his conception of posits. …Read more
  •  37
    Christian Georg Martin offers an argumentative reconstruction of the whole work, reading it as a critical ontology, namely as the attempt to abstract from all presuppositions and to immanently unfold conceptual determinations characterizing ...