Könyv THE WORLD IN SILENCE Noah Blake

THE WORLD IN SILENCE

Form, Logic, and the Limits of Meaning in the Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus

Szerző: Noah Blake
Nyelv: Angol
Kötés: Puha kötésű
Elérhetőség: Beszállítói készleten
Küldés 14-21 napon belül
3 928 Ft
What if the silence at the end of the Tractatus is not where philosophy stops - but what it was for...

Információk a könyvről

Szerző
Nyelv
Angol
Kötés
Könyv - Puha kötésű
Kiadva
2026
oldal
122
EAN
9798184035857
Enbook ID
53016715
Súly
175
Méretek
152 x 229 x 7

Teljes leírás

What if the silence at the end of the Tractatus is not where philosophy stops - but what it was for all along?

Ludwig Wittgenstein's Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus is the most austere masterpiece of twentieth-century philosophy: seven propositions, a theory of language and logic, and a final command to remain silent about what cannot be said. For a hundred years, that ending has divided its readers. Was Wittgenstein gesturing at ineffable truths? Confessing the failure of his own book? Or doing something no one had quite seen?

The World in Silence: Form, Logic, and the Limits of Meaning in the Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus offers a bold and unifying answer. Across five chapters and a deep concluding synthesis, it defends a single thesis pursued with rare severity: the form of the world can only show itself - it can never be said - and the silence of the Tractatus is therefore a result, not a renunciation.

Inside this book you will find:
A clear, rigorous reconstruction of Wittgenstein's ontology, logic, philosophy of language, and ethics - each chapter mapping the live debate before advancing its own argument.
A direct confrontation between the classical interpreters (Anscombe, Black, Hacker, Pears) and the resolute and elucidatory readings (Diamond, Conant, Kremer, McGinn) - and a demonstration that the century-long quarrel dissolves into a single result.
An engagement with the most recent peer-reviewed scholarship, used not as appeals to authority but as instruments of argument.
A reading of the famous seventh proposition that makes its silence, at last, fully intelligible.

Written to satisfy the specialist and to guide the newcomer, this Second Edition is revised and expanded throughout, with a consolidated scholarly bibliography in Chicago style.

If you have ever wondered why the deepest things resist being said, this book will change how you read - and how you fall silent.

A serious work of philosophy for readers of Wittgenstein, analytic philosophy, philosophy of language, logic, and the history of ideas.