Full Text
5. Ludwig Wittgenstein (1889–1951)
P. M. S. HACKER
Subject
History of Philosophy
»
History of Analytic Philosophy
Period
1000 - 1999
»
1800-1899, 1900-1999
People
Wittgenstein, Ludwig
DOI: 10.1111/b.9781405133463.2006.00007.x
Extract
Ludwig Josef Johann Wittgenstein dominates the history of twentieth-century analytic philosophy somewhat as Picasso dominates the history of twentieth-century art. He did not so much create a “school,” but rather changed the philosophical landscape –not once, but twice. And his successors, within the broad stream of analytic philosophy, whether they followed the paths he pioneered or not, had to reorient themselves by reference to new landmarks consequent upon his work. He completed two diametrically opposed philosophical masterpieces, the Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus (1921) and the Philosophical Investigations (1953) . Each gave rise to distinct phases in the history of the analytic movement. The Tractatus was a source of Cambridge analysis of the interwar years, and the main source of the logical positivism of the Vienna Circle. The Investigations was a primary inspiration for the form of analytic philosophy that flourished in the quarter of a century after the end of the Second World War, with its center at Oxford and its circumference everywhere in the English-speaking world and beyond. He taught at Cambridge from 1930 until his premature retirement in 1947. Many of his pupils became leading figures in the next generation of philosophers, transmitting his ideas to their students. Wittgenstein's central preoccupations at the beginning of his philosophical career were ... log in or subscribe to read full text
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