The Literary WittgensteinJohn Gibson, Wolfgang Huemer Psychology Press, 2004 - 356 sider The Literary Wittgenstein is a stellar collection of articles relating the philosophy of Ludwig Wittgenstein (1889-1951) to core problems in the theory and philosophy of literature. |
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... distinction , the role of intentions for interpreting a text becomes dubious , for we can never know what the author really intended . If we adopt a Wittgensteinian stance we can see that Wilmsatt and Beardsley have gone too far . We ...
... distinction cannot always be sharply drawn . The arguments developed challenge the distinction from both directions : some focus on the literary quality of specific philosophical texts , namely Wittgenstein's own writing , and the ...
... distinction between saying and showing she argues that in literary texts – just like in the Tractatus - moral philos- ophy belongs to the unsayable ; it is not explicitly stated , nor do we need an elaborated theory to understand it ...
... distinction between the inner and the outer , language as a practice shared by more than one person , the mind and its limits , as well as the status of psychopathology . Richard Eldridge points out that the interest of the ...
... distinction to the philosophy of literature , cf. John Gibson , " Between Truth and Triviality , " British Journal of Aesthetics 43 ( 2003 ) , 224-37 . 18 Colin Lyas , " Wittgensteinian Intentions , " Gary Iseminger ( ed . ) Intention ...