This book considers the hypothesis that the Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus can be interpreted from a mystical point of view. Atkinson elucidates Wittgenstein's thoughts on the mystical as they pertain to a number of topics such as, God, the meaning of life, reality, the eternal and the solipsistic self.
This book considers the hypothesis that the Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus can be interpreted from a mystical point of view. Atkinson elucidates Wittgenstein's thoughts on the mystical as they pertain to a number of topics such as, God, the meaning of life, reality, the eternal and the solipsistic self.
Acknowledgments Introduction Chapter 1: Self-subsistence and Method Chapter 2: What cannot be put into Words, Method and Mysticism Chapter 3: Language, Method and Mysticism Chapter 4: Showing and Wittgenstein's Two Objections to Russell's Theory of Types Chapter 5: Two Senses of Showing Chapter 6: The Mystical and Showing Chapter 7: Time and The Mystical Chapter 8: Mysticism and the Problems of Philosophy Chapter 9: Nonsense and Two Interpretations of the Tractatus Chapter 10: Metaphysics and the Mystical Chapter 11: The Mystical and the Meaning of Life Conclusion: Silence Bibliography Index
Acknowledgments Introduction Chapter 1: Self-subsistence and Method Chapter 2: What cannot be put into Words, Method and Mysticism Chapter 3: Language, Method and Mysticism Chapter 4: Showing and Wittgenstein's Two Objections to Russell's Theory of Types Chapter 5: Two Senses of Showing Chapter 6: The Mystical and Showing Chapter 7: Time and The Mystical Chapter 8: Mysticism and the Problems of Philosophy Chapter 9: Nonsense and Two Interpretations of the Tractatus Chapter 10: Metaphysics and the Mystical Chapter 11: The Mystical and the Meaning of Life Conclusion: Silence Bibliography Index
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