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43 of 43 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Surprisingly readable, 27 April 2002
How does a word have meaning in our minds? How does it have the same meaning in the minds of others? They're old and abstract questions, and Ludwig Wittgenstein is famous for his two books on them. Philosophical Investigations is the second of the books; it advocates meaning as a product of a language-game played between people; it reacts against meaning as a formally logical or mathematical attribute of a word. Language and language-games pervade our lives and our thinking - the book's scope is wide, and its classic status seems quite deserved. As a layman, the great surprise for me instead was its readability. Wittgenstein found himself, late in life, unable to write Philosophical Investigations as an essay, instead opting for a series of numbered points of a few paragraphs each. The quality of writing - at least Elizabeth Anscombe's English translation - is such that ideas get transmitted with wonderful succinctness, even while the arguments are subtly encircling a topic that resists direct assault. Combined with many visual metaphors, the effect is of a tremendously intellectual comic book, offering rewards for different readers diving to different philosophical depths. This edition in particular, with facing pages of English and German translations of the same section, is steeped in scholarly and craftsmanlike care. It all enhanced the wonderfully bookish air of a tract on language and thought itself; and when I paused or concluded reading it brought not a frustrated confusion but instead a steady, baffled wonderment.
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22 of 42 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An unanswered challenge to analytic philosophy, 1 Feb 2002
By A Customer
In the philosophical Investigations Wittgenstein destroys the whole edifice of analytic philosophy. For Wittgenstein, philosophical problems - as investigated by analytic philosophers - are brought into being by the analytic method itself. The problem, then, is to understand this point and to free oneself from the psuedo puzzles created by the method. The fact that fifty years on we still await the first serious rebuttal to Wittgenstein's view ably demonstrates their potency and contemporary relevance. Analytic philosophy should cease until the problems raised in this book are addressed.
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4 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Phenomens of thinking, 15 April 2007
This review is from: Philosophical Investigations: The German Text with a Revised English Translation: German Text, with a Revised English Translation (Hardcover)
I cannot say that I understood all, but I understood enough to value evidence of Ludwig thinking and writing notes about thoughts. One could use a life time trying to figure out what Ludwig meant by all this but I don't think that is necessary. I can take this book read some parts, maybe understand something new, put book back to shelf and come back any day later. I don't also think this book should be read from beginning to end. Opening any page can give thoughts. Something like aphorism collection. Perhaps when I die there will be Wittgenstein quote on my memorial writing. I would be pleased about that.
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