Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Permissions
- Acknowledgments
- Preface to Updated Edition of Must We Mean What We Say?
- Foreword: An Audience for Philosophy
- I Must We Mean What We Say?
- II The Availability of Wittgenstein's Later Philosophy
- III Aesthetic Problems of Modern Philosophy
- IV Austin at Criticism
- V Ending the Waiting Game
- VI Kierkegaard's
- VII Music Discomposed
- VIII A Matter of Meaning It
- IX Knowing and Acknowledging
- X The Avoidance of Love
- Thematic Index
- Index of Names
III - Aesthetic Problems of Modern Philosophy
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Permissions
- Acknowledgments
- Preface to Updated Edition of Must We Mean What We Say?
- Foreword: An Audience for Philosophy
- I Must We Mean What We Say?
- II The Availability of Wittgenstein's Later Philosophy
- III Aesthetic Problems of Modern Philosophy
- IV Austin at Criticism
- V Ending the Waiting Game
- VI Kierkegaard's
- VII Music Discomposed
- VIII A Matter of Meaning It
- IX Knowing and Acknowledging
- X The Avoidance of Love
- Thematic Index
- Index of Names
Summary
The Spirit of the Age is not easy to place, ontologically or empirically; and it is idle to suggest that creative effort must express its age, either because that cannot fail to happen, or because a new effort can create a new age. Still, one knows what it means when an art historian says, thinking of the succession of plastic styles, “not everything is possible in every period.” And that is equally true for every person and every philosophy. But then one is never sure what is possible until it happens; and when it happens it may produce a sense of revolution, of the past escaped and our problems solved—even when we also know that one man's solution is another man's problem.
Wittgenstein expressed his sense both of the revolutionary break his later methods descry in philosophy, and of their relation to methods in aesthetics and ethics. I have tried, in what follows, to suggest ways in which such feelings or claims can be understood, believing them to be essential in understanding Wittgenstein's later philosophy as a whole. The opening section outlines two problems in aesthetics each of which seems to yield to the possibilities of Wittgensteinian procedures, and in turn to illuminate them. The concluding section suggests resemblances between one kind of judgment recognizable as aesthetic and the characteristic claim of Wittgenstein—and of ordinary language philosophers generally—to voice “what we should ordinarily say.”
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- Chapter
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- Must We Mean What We Say?A Book of Essays, pp. 73 - 96Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2002
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