Ernest Gellner
Language and Solitude
Wittgenstein, Malinowski and the Habsburg Dilemma
Herausgeber: Gellner, David
Ernest Gellner
Language and Solitude
Wittgenstein, Malinowski and the Habsburg Dilemma
Herausgeber: Gellner, David
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Gellner's final book is a synoptic interpretation of the thought of Wittgenstein and Malinowski.
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Gellner's final book is a synoptic interpretation of the thought of Wittgenstein and Malinowski.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 230
- Erscheinungstermin: 6. August 2012
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 13mm
- Gewicht: 340g
- ISBN-13: 9780521639972
- ISBN-10: 0521639972
- Artikelnr.: 21411998
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 230
- Erscheinungstermin: 6. August 2012
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 13mm
- Gewicht: 340g
- ISBN-13: 9780521639972
- ISBN-10: 0521639972
- Artikelnr.: 21411998
Preface David Gellner
Foreword Steven Lukes
Part I. The Habsburg Predicament: 1. Swing alone or swing together
2. The rivals
3. Genesis of the individualist vision
4. The metaphysics of romanticism
5. Romanticism and the basis of nationalism
6. Individualism and holism in society
7. Crisis in Kakania
8. Pariah liberalism
9. Recapitulation
Part II. Wittgenstein: 10. The loneliness of the long-distance empiricist
11. The poem to solitude, or: confessions of a rranscendental ego who is also a Viennese Jew
12. The ego and language
13. The world as solitary vice
14. The mystical
15. The central proposition of the Tractatus: world without culture
16. Wittgenstein mark 2
17. Tertium non datur
18. Joint escape
19. Janik and Toulmin: a critique
20. The case of the disappearing self
21. Pariah communalism
22. Iron cage Kafka style
Part III. Malinowski: 23. The birth of modern social anthropology
24. The Malinowskian revolution
25. How did Malinowski get there?
26. Whither anthropology? or: wither Bronislaw Malinowski?
27. The difference between Krakow and Vienna
28. Malinowski's achievement and politics
29. Malinowski's theory of language
30. Malinowski's later mistake
31. The (un)originality of Malinowski and Wittgenstein
Part IV. Influences: 32. The impact and diffusion of Wittgenstein's ideas
33. The first wave of Wittgenstein's influence
34. A belated convergence of philosophy and anthropology
Part V. Conclusions: 35. The truth of the matter
36. Our present condition
General bibliography
I. Jarvie, Bibliography of Ernest Gellner's writings on Wittgenstein, Malinowski, and nationalism.
Foreword Steven Lukes
Part I. The Habsburg Predicament: 1. Swing alone or swing together
2. The rivals
3. Genesis of the individualist vision
4. The metaphysics of romanticism
5. Romanticism and the basis of nationalism
6. Individualism and holism in society
7. Crisis in Kakania
8. Pariah liberalism
9. Recapitulation
Part II. Wittgenstein: 10. The loneliness of the long-distance empiricist
11. The poem to solitude, or: confessions of a rranscendental ego who is also a Viennese Jew
12. The ego and language
13. The world as solitary vice
14. The mystical
15. The central proposition of the Tractatus: world without culture
16. Wittgenstein mark 2
17. Tertium non datur
18. Joint escape
19. Janik and Toulmin: a critique
20. The case of the disappearing self
21. Pariah communalism
22. Iron cage Kafka style
Part III. Malinowski: 23. The birth of modern social anthropology
24. The Malinowskian revolution
25. How did Malinowski get there?
26. Whither anthropology? or: wither Bronislaw Malinowski?
27. The difference between Krakow and Vienna
28. Malinowski's achievement and politics
29. Malinowski's theory of language
30. Malinowski's later mistake
31. The (un)originality of Malinowski and Wittgenstein
Part IV. Influences: 32. The impact and diffusion of Wittgenstein's ideas
33. The first wave of Wittgenstein's influence
34. A belated convergence of philosophy and anthropology
Part V. Conclusions: 35. The truth of the matter
36. Our present condition
General bibliography
I. Jarvie, Bibliography of Ernest Gellner's writings on Wittgenstein, Malinowski, and nationalism.
Preface David Gellner
Foreword Steven Lukes
Part I. The Habsburg Predicament: 1. Swing alone or swing together
2. The rivals
3. Genesis of the individualist vision
4. The metaphysics of romanticism
5. Romanticism and the basis of nationalism
6. Individualism and holism in society
7. Crisis in Kakania
8. Pariah liberalism
9. Recapitulation
Part II. Wittgenstein: 10. The loneliness of the long-distance empiricist
11. The poem to solitude, or: confessions of a rranscendental ego who is also a Viennese Jew
12. The ego and language
13. The world as solitary vice
14. The mystical
15. The central proposition of the Tractatus: world without culture
16. Wittgenstein mark 2
17. Tertium non datur
18. Joint escape
19. Janik and Toulmin: a critique
20. The case of the disappearing self
21. Pariah communalism
22. Iron cage Kafka style
Part III. Malinowski: 23. The birth of modern social anthropology
24. The Malinowskian revolution
25. How did Malinowski get there?
26. Whither anthropology? or: wither Bronislaw Malinowski?
27. The difference between Krakow and Vienna
28. Malinowski's achievement and politics
29. Malinowski's theory of language
30. Malinowski's later mistake
31. The (un)originality of Malinowski and Wittgenstein
Part IV. Influences: 32. The impact and diffusion of Wittgenstein's ideas
33. The first wave of Wittgenstein's influence
34. A belated convergence of philosophy and anthropology
Part V. Conclusions: 35. The truth of the matter
36. Our present condition
General bibliography
I. Jarvie, Bibliography of Ernest Gellner's writings on Wittgenstein, Malinowski, and nationalism.
Foreword Steven Lukes
Part I. The Habsburg Predicament: 1. Swing alone or swing together
2. The rivals
3. Genesis of the individualist vision
4. The metaphysics of romanticism
5. Romanticism and the basis of nationalism
6. Individualism and holism in society
7. Crisis in Kakania
8. Pariah liberalism
9. Recapitulation
Part II. Wittgenstein: 10. The loneliness of the long-distance empiricist
11. The poem to solitude, or: confessions of a rranscendental ego who is also a Viennese Jew
12. The ego and language
13. The world as solitary vice
14. The mystical
15. The central proposition of the Tractatus: world without culture
16. Wittgenstein mark 2
17. Tertium non datur
18. Joint escape
19. Janik and Toulmin: a critique
20. The case of the disappearing self
21. Pariah communalism
22. Iron cage Kafka style
Part III. Malinowski: 23. The birth of modern social anthropology
24. The Malinowskian revolution
25. How did Malinowski get there?
26. Whither anthropology? or: wither Bronislaw Malinowski?
27. The difference between Krakow and Vienna
28. Malinowski's achievement and politics
29. Malinowski's theory of language
30. Malinowski's later mistake
31. The (un)originality of Malinowski and Wittgenstein
Part IV. Influences: 32. The impact and diffusion of Wittgenstein's ideas
33. The first wave of Wittgenstein's influence
34. A belated convergence of philosophy and anthropology
Part V. Conclusions: 35. The truth of the matter
36. Our present condition
General bibliography
I. Jarvie, Bibliography of Ernest Gellner's writings on Wittgenstein, Malinowski, and nationalism.