Ludwig Wittgenstein

From Geography

Jump to: navigation, search
alt text

Ludwig Wittgenstein (1889 - 1951) was a philosopher, born in Vienna. He studied engineering in Linz and Berlin and from 1908, aeronautical engineering in Manchester where he developed his interest for pure mathematics and philosophy.


Contents

Early Life

Ludwig Wittgenstein was born in Vienna in 1889, in a very artistic, Jewish family of which he was the youngest child.

He studied engineering in Linz and Berlin and from 1908, aeronautical engineering in Manchester where he developed his interest for pure mathematics and philosophy. Im 1912 he moved to Cambridge to study logic and philosophy. At that time he had three major interests: philosophy, music and traveling. It is known that he abandoned Cambridge in 1913 by moving to a farm in Norway.

At the beginning of the war he enlisted as a volunteer in the Austrian army and when it finished he was interned in an italian POW-camp (prisoner-of-war camp) until 1919. During those years, since his stay in Norway, he continued thinking about the problems of logic and philosophy and he wrote a short treatise thinking that with it he definitively resolved those problems. The book was published in 1921 in the "Annalen der Naturphilosophie" under the title "Logisch-philosopische Abhandlung" and in 1922 was published the english version "Tractatus Logico-philosophicus" which included an introduction wrote by his friend B. Russell [1]. It became the most influential work of his time.

After the publication, he considered his public philosophical activity completed and returned to Austria where he worked as a teacher between 1920 and 1926 and even as an assistant gardener at a convent. Lately, he returned to Vienna and he resumed contact with philosophy. After a brief encounter with the Vienna Circle and influenced by a conference given by Brouwer, in 1929 he went back to Cambridge and he joined he Trinity College as a fellow presenting the Tractatus as his doctoral thesis. He stayed there until 1936, when he returned to Norway where he started to work on his second book, the "Philosophical Investigations". In 1937 he returned to Cambridge and in 1939 he was given the Chair of Philosophy and became british citizen. In 1975 his mathematics course was published under the title "Wittgenstein's Lectures on the Foundations of Mathematics".

At the start of World War II he was a volunteer in Newcastle. During this period (1937-1944) he worked intensively on the philosophy of mathematics. In 1944 he returned to Cambridge, but in 1947 he resigned from the professorship and moved to Ireland with the intention to work more in the second part of "Investigations". He died in 1951 and his second book was published posthumously in 1953 and had a greater importance than the Tractatus. Wittgenstein became more know at the end of his life. Altough he was known by other philosophers in the Angelsaksion countries.


Philosophy

Wittgenstein was one the 20th century philosophers who changed their opinions, thoughts and beliefs during their lifes (Storig, 2008, p689). Language became a focuspoint of philosphy after a long period. Wittgenstein has contributed to this development by far the most. Because of his contributions in the field of philosophy he made the Linguistic turn a topicfield in the nowadays philosophy.


Because of the changes of his philosophical positions, his life can be distinguished between a first period focused on tractatus and a second period, from 1929, whose maximum exponent would be Investigations. Although this separation is excessive, because there is a continuity between the two periods and the change is gradual, it is clear that the point of view is essentially changed. Indeed, the fundamental issue is the same throughout his work: the nature of language, how it represents the world and the implications this has for logic and mathematics.

In the Tractatus, the approach is objectivist. Consider abstract language independent of human activities. Its relationship with the world through logic is formal and static. So in any case, they say nothing about the world, they just show us the nature of language and its properties.

In the second period, however, the emphasis is placed on the subjects, people's actions and the role that language plays in their activities. The language is no longer an abstraction but a set of practices in which the fundamental and defining meaning is the use within the context of everyday social activities, such as asking, advising, etc. These activities are language games (as well as mathematics are a language game, so they do not need external fundamentals but analysis) in which rules are set and interpreted and which together constitute social life forms, sets of established human social practices and lived with their own purposes, implicit rules, patterns of behavior and language use. Wittgenstein formed some sort of formula for his new theory on meaning of language, namely:

meaning = use

Meaning depends on how someone within the context of a language game, a word or phrase uses. An example is this is 'could you give me that needle?'. This sentence can be interpreted in different ways, so to speak, different contexts. When a doctor says this he or she is probably looking for a different needle, then when an old lady askes for it (Ten Bos, personal communication, 2011).


This is how Ludwig Wittgenstein's work caused him to be considered as the percusor of social constructivism in mathematics.


References

  • Sánchez Navarro J (2000).Las Matemáticas del siglo XX: Una mirada en 101 artículos. Ludwig Wittgenstein. Sociedad Canaria Isaac Newton de Profesores de Mateática. España. Artículo 43.
  • Ten Bos, R (2011). Personal communication, Filosofie van de Managementwetenschappen; Ludwig von Wittgenstein

Storig, H.J. (2008). Geschiedenis van de filosofie. Uitgeverij het Spectrum


Contributors

  • Page enhanced by --GijsJansen 15:36, 27 October 2011 (CEST)
  • Page edited by Malou van Woerkum
  • Page enhance by Kamiel Nuijens
  • Photo added by Kamiel Nuijens
  • Page edited and links added by Isis Boot - --IsisBoot 12:41, 24 October 2012 (CEST)
  • Picture added by Isis Boot - --IsisBoot 20:57, 24 October 2012 (CEST)
  • Page edited, added link by Michiel van Rijn --MichielVanRijn 01:15, 26 October 2012 (CEST)
Personal tools