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         Wittgenstein Ludwig:     more books (99)
  1. Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus by Ludwig Wittgenstein, 2010-01-09
  2. Ludwig Wittgenstein: The Duty of Genius by Ray Monk, 1991-11-01
  3. Philosophical Investigations by Ludwig Wittgenstein, 2009-10-20
  4. Wittgenstein's Lectures on the Foundations of Mathematics, Cambridge, 1939 by Ludwig Wittgenstein, 1989-10-15
  5. Ludwig Wittgenstein: The Man and His Philosophy
  6. Logic and Sin in the Writings of Ludwig Wittgenstein by Philip R. Shields, 1998-02-28
  7. Wittgenstein: A Very Short Introduction (Very Short Introductions) by A. C. Grayling, 2001-07-28
  8. Philosophical Investigations (3rd Edition) by Ludwig Wittgenstein, 1973-03-11
  9. On Certainty by Ludwig Wittgenstein, 1991-01-15
  10. Notebooks, 1914-1916 by Ludwig Wittgenstein, 1984-01-15
  11. Wittgenstein's Vienna Revisited by Allan Janik, 2001-04-12
  12. Wittgenstein's Lectures, Cambridge, 1930-32 (Midway Reprint) by Ludwig Wittgenstein, 1989-06-15
  13. Letters from Ludwig Wittgenstein with A Memoir (English and German Edition) by Ludwig Wittgenstein, Paul Engelmann, 1974-03
  14. Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus by Ludwig Wittgenstein, 2009-10-04

1. Wittgenstein
Various brief essays and notes about Wittgenstein's work, as well as several original essays using Category Society Philosophy Philosophers Wittgenstein, Ludwig......Ludwig Wittgenstein Looking at the implications of Wittgenstein and his philosophyof mind, language and culture. Who was Ludwig Wittgenstein?
http://www.seanet.com/~john7/wittgenstein/

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Religious Thought
Ludwig Wittgenstein Looking at the implications of Wittgenstein and his philosophy of mind, language and culture. I am seriously behind in updating this site. I have received email from many visitors and some new material to include. Sorry about the long delay. I hope to have a revision completed by the first of February and possibly move this site to its own server (www.wittgenstein.org or something..)Thank you all for your patience. Wittgenstein Introduction The first time I remember having a "revelatory Insight" reading Wittgenstein was late one night while working behind the counter at an all-night gas station. I read the remark "why can't I describe the aroma of coffee". I fully understood then what LW meant by his writings as a "kind of therapy", and further the metaphysical focus of his intellectual and moral quest. I had always been struck by his method of writing little numbered comments as a kind of Zen koan. My previous backgrounds as a psychedelic pioneer and later theological student and minister, and then (1982) current state as fledgling college Marxist, constituted a ready mind for the kind of thinking that was necessary to stop thinking and look . I am certainly not a scholar of LW. I cannot read German, have no advanced degrees, and have studiously avoided mathematics. I can claim, however to have consumed all of his major writings in English, some repeatedly, and I believe I see "what he was pointing at," even if rather brutishly.

2. Island Of Freedom - Ludwig Wittgenstein
Fan site with brief biography and links.Category Society Philosophy Wittgenstein, Ludwig Biographies......Ludwig Wittgenstein. 18891951. Ludwig Wittgenstein was one of themost original and influential philosophers of the 20th century.
http://www.island-of-freedom.com/WITTGEN.HTM
Ludwig Wittgenstein
Ludwig Wittgenstein (1889-1951)
The Wittgenstein Archives

Wittgenstein and Psychology

Wittgenstein and Scientific Knowledge
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Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus
- German and English
Ludwig Wittgenstein was one of the most original and influential philosophers of the 20th century. He was by birth an Austrian of Jewish descent. He received most of his early education at home before studying engineering at Berlin and Manchester, which led to an interest in pure mathematics and the philosophy of mathematics, and in 1912 he moved to Cambridge to become a pupil of Bertrand Russell. His work from 1914-18 led to the writing of the Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus , which was published in Germany in 1921 and in London in 1922. Wittgenstein served in the Austrian army in World War I and was captured in Italy, and on his release after the war he gave away a considerable fortune he had inherited. From 1920-26 he went to work as an elementary schoolmaster in Austria, then returned to Cambridge in 1929. During the next few years he came to a new position in philosophy, which was first stated in the Blue and Brown Books , a set of lecture notes from 1933-35 and published posthumously in 1958, and later in his Philosophical Investigations (published 1953). He became Professor of Philosophy at Cambridge in 1939, succeeding G. E. Moore. In 1947 he resigned to devote himself to research, but his health soon deteriorated and he died of cancer in 1951.

3. Wittgenstein
From the MacTutor History of Mathematics archive. Well referenced.Category Society Philosophy Wittgenstein, Ludwig Biographies......Ludwig Josef Johann Wittgenstein. Ludwig Wittgenstein's parents were both very musicaland Ludwig was brought up in a home which was always filled with music.
http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Wittgenstein.html
Ludwig Josef Johann Wittgenstein
Born: 26 April 1889 in Vienna, Austria
Died: 29 April 1951 in Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, England
Click the picture above
to see two larger pictures Show birthplace location Previous (Chronologically) Next Biographies Index Previous (Alphabetically) Next Main index
Ludwig Wittgenstein 's parents were both very musical and Ludwig was brought up in a home which was always filled with music. Ludwig's parents had eight children who were all highly gifted both artistically and intellectually. The family were wealthy industrialists having made a fortune in the steel industry and they were able to provide the best possible education for their children. Ludwig was the youngest of the children and was educated at home until he was fourteen years of age. In 1903 Wittgenstein began three years of schooling in Austria at a school which specialised in mathematics and natural science. This emphasis led Wittgenstein to decide to study engineering and, in 1906, he went to Berlin where began studies in mechanical engineering. Intending to study for his doctorate in engineering, Wittgenstein went to England in 1908 and registered as a research student in an engineering laboratory of the University of Manchester. His first project involved the study of the behaviour of kites in the upper atmosphere of the earth. He moved from this to further study of aeronautical research, this time examining the design of a propeller with a small jet engine on the end of each blade. At this stage Wittgenstein was much more practically minded than one might suppose, given his later highly theoretical work, and he not only studied the theoretical design of the propeller but he actually built and tested it.

4. Philosophers : Ludwig Wittgenstein
Ludwig Wittgenstein. Ordinary Language Philosopher. Britain. 18891951.Born into a hugely wealthy Austrian family, Ludwig Wittgenstein
http://www.trincoll.edu/depts/phil/philo/phils/wittgenstein.html
Ludwig Wittgenstein
Ordinary Language Philosopher
Britain
Born into a hugely wealthy Austrian family, Ludwig Wittgenstein set off at an early age to revolutionize modern philosophy by examining its most core component: our language. His life is considered in three distinct periods, each of which correspond to his philosophical standing at the time. His early work, part of what is called his Tractarian period, is summed up in his book Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus (1921). This was an attempt to reconcile the positions of Frege's apriorism and Russell's atomism in one work. An accomplished logician, Wittgenstein sought to find the true logic behind our misunderstood language, hence his development of Ordinary Language Philosophy. Utilizing such tools as the piicture theory of meaning, he ended up concluding with the thought that Tractatus was just a tool to aid in achieving an understanding of the idea that only statements of natural sciences are meaningful. He concluded that "Whereof one cannot speak, thereof one must be silent." His next period was one of inactivity. He met with the influential Vienna Circle during the early 30s, and he was soon convinced of a flaw in

5. Wittgenstein Ludwig From FOLDOC
wittgenstein ludwig. history of philsophy, biography raised in a prominentViennese family, Ludwig Wittgenstein (18891951) studied
http://lgxserver.uniba.it/lei/foldop/foldoc.cgi?Wittgenstein Ludwig

6. Tractatus Logico-philosophicus Wittgenstein Ludwig
Translate this page Tractatus logico-philosophicus wittgenstein ludwig. Titel Tractatus logico-philosophicus.Autor wittgenstein ludwig. Rubrik Philosophie 20. 21.
http://www.1a-krimitrend.de/Wittgenstein-Ludwig-Tractatus-logico-philosop-305002
Tractatus logico-philosophicus Wittgenstein Ludwig
Titel: Tractatus logico-philosophicus.
Autor: Wittgenstein Ludwig
Rubrik: Philosophie 20. 21. Jahrhundert Logik Einzelne Philosophen Wittgenstein Ludwig
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7. Ludwig Wittgenstein
Ludwig Wittgenstein (18891951). joods filosoof. Wittgenstein OnlineHomepage van de Duitse Ludwig Wittgenstein Gesellschaft.
http://www.ichthustref.nl/hoofdmap_links/lexikonfilosofen/filosofen-lexicon/witt
Ludwig Wittgenstein (1889-1951) joods filosoof Wittgenstein Online Homepage van de Duitse Ludwig Wittgenstein Gesellschaft Brian Carver's Wittgenstein links grote hoeveelheid Wittgenstein-materiaal Ludwig Wittgenstein Garth Kemerling's philosophy site Ludwig Wittgenstein Island of Freedom site Ludwig Wittgenstein Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Lectures on Philosophy Uitgebreide Wittgenstein-site Björn's Guide To Philosophy - brief biography with links to Wittgenstein sites. Commentary on Wittgenstein's Philosophical Investigations - by Lois Shawver. Ludwig Wittgenstein - providing biographical information, links, and bibliography. Ludwig Wittgenstein Online - life and philosophy of Ludwig Wittgenstein Ludwig Wittgenstein: Analysis of Language - Introduction to his work (PhilosophyPages). Private Language - discusses Wittgenstein's argument and offers countering views and resources. Review of Chomsky's Criticism of Kripke's Wittgenstein - discusses the skeptical paradox, its solution, and Wittgensteinian problems. Wittgenstein Archives - working toward making the complete writings of Wittgenstein available in the form of electronic facsimile and transcriptions.

8. WIEM: Wittgenstein Ludwig
(encyklopedia.pl)Category World Polska Leksykon Encyklopedia encyklopedia.pl W......wittgenstein ludwig (18891951), filozof austriacki. Filozofia, Austria WittgensteinLudwig (1889-1951), widok strony znajdz podobne pokaz powiazane.
http://wiem.onet.pl/wiem/00d1e8.html
wiem.onet.pl napisz do nas losuj: has³a multimedia Filozofia, Austria
Wittgenstein Ludwig widok strony
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Wittgenstein Ludwig (1889-1951), filozof austriacki. Od 1911 studiowa³ w Cambridge. 1939-1947 profesor tego¿ uniwersytetu. Interesowa³ siê g³ównie problemem stosunku my¶lenia do ¶wiata, ¶ci¶lej za¶ jêzyka do opisywanej przez ten jêzyk rzeczywisto¶ci. Dwa ró¿ne sposoby ujêcia owego problemu dziel± dzia³alno¶æ Wittgensteina na dwa odmienne okresy. W okresie pierwszym, dokumentowanym przez Tractatus logico-philosophicus (1921, wydanie polskie 1970), podj±³ próbê zbudowania ca³o¶ciowego systemu, na gruncie którego da³oby siê wyt³umaczyæ wszelkie aspekty tego, co nazwa³ "gramatyk± filozoficzn±". Uzna³, ¿e ca³a wiedza o ¶wiecie zawarta jest w opisuj±cych jednostkowe fakty tzw. zdaniach elementarnych, których funkcjami s± wszelkie inne sformu³owania, i ¿e granice jêzyka stanowi± te¿ granice dostêpnego cz³owiekowi ¶wiata. Ró¿norakie kwestie filozoficzne, zdaniem Wittgensteina, s± przejawem uwik³ania siê umys³u w "¶rodki" jêzyka - to, co niewyra¿alne, choæ istnieje, mo¿e byæ bowiem tylko przedmiotem bezs³ownej kontemplacji, nie za¶ jakichkolwiek zrozumia³ych wypowiedzi. W okresie drugim, którego wyraz stanowi±

9. Xrefer - Search Results - Ludwig Wittgenstein
next results page . wittgenstein ludwig 1889 1951. wittgenstein ludwig 1889 1951Austrian philosopher, who studied with Bertrand Russell and GE Moore at
http://www.xrefer.com/results.jsp?shelf=&term=Ludwig Wittgenstein

10. Cosmic Baseball Association-Ludwig Wittgenstein
Ludwig Wittgenstein. General Manager. Ludwig Wittgenstein. Born April26, 1889 Died April 29, 1951. Philosopher. Ludwig Josef Johann
http://www.cosmicbaseball.com/wittgen6.html
Ludwig Wittgenstein
General Manager
Ludwig Wittgenstein
Born: April 26, 1889 - Died: April 29, 1951
Philosopher
Ludwig Josef Johann Wittgenstein, born in Vienna, attended the same school as Adolf Hitler, at the same time. Ludwig attended the Realschule in Linz from 1903-1906, and Hitler matriculated from 1904-1905. Later he studied mechanical engineering in Berlin and did aeronautical research in Manchester, England. In 1911 he studied mathematical logic with Bertrand Russell at Cambridge. When World War One started, Wittgenstein joined the Austrian army and was posted on the russian front, and then, in northern Italy. He was in a prisoner-of-war camp until 1919. After getting out of prison, Wittgenstein gave away his substantial inheritance and went to teach in rural Austria. By 1929, he returned to Cambridge where he remained until 1947. During World War Two he served in a hospital. As for his influence in the field of philosophy, the following quotes will suffice: [Wittgenstein] was undoubtedly the most charismatic figure of 20th-century philosophy, living and writing with a power and intensity thst frequently overwhelmed his contemporaries and readers. Bjorn's Guide to Philosophy [Wittgenstein] was one of the most original and influential philosophers of the 20th century.

11. Wittgensteins Einfluß Auf Die Kultur Der Gegenwart Wittgenstein Ludwig
Translate this page Wittgensteins Einfluß auf die Kultur der Gegenwart wittgenstein ludwig. Titel WittgensteinsEinfluß auf die Kultur der Gegenwart. Autor wittgenstein ludwig.
http://www.easy-romanfux.de/Wittgenstein-Ludwig-Wittgensteins-Einfluss-auf-37003
Wittgensteins Einfluß auf die Kultur der Gegenwart Wittgenstein Ludwig
Titel: Wittgensteins Einfluß auf die Kultur der Gegenwart.
Autor: Wittgenstein Ludwig
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12. Ludwig Wittgenstein [Internet Encyclopedia Of Philosophy]
Entry by Duncan J. Richter outlining wittgenstein's thought and place in philosophy.Category Society Philosophy Philosophers wittgenstein, ludwig......The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy ludwig wittgenstein (1889 1951). wittgensteintold ludwig von Ficker that the point of the Tractatus was ethical.
http://www.utm.edu/research/iep/w/wittgens.htm
Ludwig Wittgenstein (1889- 1951) Table of Contents (Clicking on the links below will take you to that part of this article)
Life Ludwig Josef Johann Wittgenstein, born on April 26th 1889 in Vienna, Austria, was a charismatic enigma. He has been something of a cult figure but shunned publicity and even built an isolated hut in Norway to live in complete seclusion. His sexuality was ambiguous but he was probably gay; how actively so is still a matter of controversy. His life seems to have been dominated by an obsession with moral and philosophical perfection, summed up in the subtitle of Ray Monk's excellent biography Wittgenstein: The Duty of Genius. His concern with moral perfection led Wittgenstein at one point to insist on confessing to several people various sins, including that of allowing others to underestimate the extent of his 'Jewishness'. His father Karl Wittgenstein's parents were born Jewish but converted to Protestantism and his mother Leopoldine (nee Kalmus) was Catholic, but her father was of Jewish descent. Wittgenstein himself was baptized in a Catholic church and was given a Catholic burial, although between baptism and burial he was neither a practicing nor a believing Catholic. The Wittgenstein family was large and wealthy. Karl Wittgenstein was one of the most successful businessmen in the Austro-Hungarian Empire, leading the iron and steel industry there. The Wittgensteins' home attracted people of culture, especially musicians, including the composer Johannes Brahms, who was a friend of the family. Music remained important to Wittgenstein throughout his life. So did darker matters. Ludwig was the youngest of eight children, and of his four brothers, three committed suicide.

13. Redirect
Willkommen auf der Homepage der Deutschen ludwig wittgenstein Gesellschaft (DLWG). Sie finden hier Zugang zu WWWMaterialen, die sich mit Werk- und Wirkungsgeschichte der sprachanalytischen Philosophie ludwig wittgensteins beschäftigen.
http://www.ags.uci.edu/~bcarver/ludwig.html
All of Brian's pages moved to http://home.earthlink.net/~bwcarver/ Please update your links.

14. The Austrian Ludwig Wittgenstein Society (ALWS)
Austrian ludwig wittgenstein Society studies wittgenstein's philosophy. Search symposiums, view a list of officials, and read publications. The Austrian ludwig wittgenstein Society (ALWS). Address Markt 63, A2880 Kirchberg am Wechsel, Austria
http://www.sbg.ac.at/phs/alws/alws.htm
The Austrian Ludwig Wittgenstein Society (ALWS) Address: Markt 63, A-2880 Kirchberg am Wechsel , Austria
Tel.: ++43/2641/2557 Fax: ++43/2641/2557 E-mail: alws@nextra.at
Bank: RAIKA Kirchberg am Wechsel, BLZ 32372, Account number: 10.611 Home
The Symposia

Addresses

ALWS Membership
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Wittgenstein

Welcome to the Austrian Ludwig Wittgenstein Society Responsible for the contents: Christian Kanzian/Alexander Hieke
Last modified: 18 September 2002

15. Wittgenstein, Ludwig
University of Bergen in Norway provides the complete works of the Austrian philosopher. Find academic papers and descriptions of the archives. The wittgenstein Archives. at the University of Bergen The wittgenstein Archives at the University of Bergen (WAB) has been of Bergen and its wittgenstein Archives, but also for the
http://www.aeiou.at/aeiou.encyclop.w/w841569.htm
A B C D ... Wittgenstein, Paul
Wittgenstein, Ludwig
Ludwig Wittgenstein. Foto.
Wittgenstein, Ludwig, * 26. 4. 1889 Wien, † 29. 4. 1951 Cambridge ( ), Philosoph; Sohn von Karl Wittgenstein , Bruder von Paul Wittgenstein . Stammte aus reicher Industriellenfamilie, ab 1906 Ingenieursstudium in Berlin, ab 1908 Research Student an der Manchester, ab 1911 in Cambridge (Freundschaft mit B. Russell, J. M. Keynes und G. E. Moore); 1914-18 als Freiwilliger im 1. Weltkrieg; war neben seiner philosophischen sozialen Zwecken ( unter anderem Trakl Wittgenstein -Stonborough ( Wittgenstein -Haus, heute Bulgarisches Kulturinstitut Wiener Kreis , den Neopositivismus und die Entwicklung der mathematischen Logik. Wittgenstein versuchte zunächst die Existenz des Irrationalen zu beweisen ("Tractatus logico-philosophicus", 1918 niedergeschrieben, 1921 erschienen); in seinem berühmten Satz "Wovon man nicht reden kann, darüber muss man schweigen" brachte er zum Ausdruck, dass über metaphysische Zusammenhänge keine sinnvollen Aussagen möglich sind. Später wandte er sich in den "Philosophischen Untersuchungen" (1930-49) dem Gebrauch und den Lebensformen der Sprache zu und suchte durch "Sprachspiele" (in denen zusammen mit der Sprache die Tätigkeiten, mit denen sie verwoben ist, berücksichtigt werden), "ein Licht in die Verhältnisse unserer Sprache" zu bringen. 1939-47 war Wittgenstein in Cambridge ( ); seine Sprachphilosophie erlangte

16. The Wittgenstein Archives 2000
Contains samples, transcriptions, and working papers based on the electonic publishing of wittgenstein's Category Society Philosophy Philosophers wittgenstein, ludwig......
http://www.hit.uib.no/wab/

17. Ludwig Wittgenstein (1889-1951)
in The Guardian Unlimited The Austrian ludwig wittgenstein Society.The Austrian ludwig wittgenstein Society Looking Back at the
http://home.earthlink.net/~bwcarver/ludwig/
April 26, 1889 - April 29, 1951
See also Gottlob Frege (1848-1925)
Biographical Information
A Short Biography (and 8k JPEG)
G.S. Davis' biography of Wittgenstein from Grolier's Encyclopedia

Short Introductory Biography of Wittgenstein from Finland

Wittgenstein Biography from biography.com
...
Wittgenstein's Wikipedia (free, interactive encyclopedia) entry
Books and Quotations by Wittgenstein
Mathematical Quotations by Wittgenstein
Jeff Biggus' Wittgenstein 'Think Page'

Quotations and a nice picture

Commentary on Wittgenstein and Quotations from the Tractatus
... Info on purchasing Wittgenstein's works on CD-ROM
Secondary Sources
Wittgenstein-related Papers, Essays, Lectures, and Books Online
Wittgenstein and Scientific Knowledge by Mark Alford
A Lecture given at Cambridge on Wittgenstein
by G.E.M. Anscombe
Chomsky v. Kripke, Round Two
by Daniel Barbiero
Private Language
by Stewart Candlish W and Kierkegaard: Religion, Individuality, and Philosophical Method by Charles Creegan Can W Help Free the Mind from Rules? Phil. Foundations of Connectionism by Itiel Dror Wittgenstein on Scepticism and Certainty by A.C. Grayling

18. TIME 100 Scientists Thinkers - Ludwig Wittgenstein
Philosopher ludwig wittgenstein He began by trying to reduce all mathematics tologic and ended by finding most metaphysics to be nonsense BY DANIEL DENNETT
http://www.time.com/time/time100/scientist/profile/wittgenstein.html

Sigmund Freud

Leo Baekeland

Albert Einstein

Alexander Fleming
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Tim Berners-Lee

Philosopher
Ludwig Wittgenstein
He began by trying to reduce all mathematics to logic and ended by finding most metaphysics to be nonsense BY DANIEL DENNETT If you would like to watch philosophers squirmand who wouldn't?pose this tough question: Suppose you may either a) solve a major philosophical problem so conclusively that there is nothing left to say (thanks to you, part of the field closes down forever, and you get a footnote in history); or b) write a book of such tantalizing perplexity and controversy that it stays on the required-reading list for centuries to come. Which would you choose? Many philosophers will reluctantly admit that they would go for option b). If they had to choose, they would rather be read than right. The Austrian philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein tried brilliantly to go for a) and ended up with b). The revolution in mathematical logic early in the 20th century opened up a delicious prospect: a rigorous science of meanings. Just as the atomic theory in physics had begun to break matter down into its constituent parts and show how they fit together to produce all the effects in nature, logic held out the promise of accounting for all meaningful texts and utterancesfrom philosophy and geometrical proofs to history and legislationby breaking them into their logical atoms and showing how those parts fit together (in an ideal language) to compose all the meanings there could be. As a young engineering student in England, Wittgenstein saw the hope of the new mathematical logic, and rushed to Cambridge to become the protege of Bertrand Russell, whose monumental "Principia Mathematica" (1913), written with Alfred North Whitehead, was an attempt to reduce all mathematics to logic. Wittgenstein's first book, published in England in 1922, the even more grandly titled "Tractatus Logico-philosophicus," went even further, and was thought by him, and by some of his admirers, to have brought philosophy to an end, its key problems definitively solved once and for all. Some "philosophical" propositions could be readily expressed and evaluated within his system, and those that couldn'tamong them, metaphysical riddles that had bedeviled philosophers for centurieswere nonsense.

19. Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus
Hypertext edition of the Ogden edition, containing both the English and German texts. It also includes Category Society Philosophy wittgenstein, ludwig Works......Lugwig wittgenstein Tractatus LogicoPhilosophicus. Hypertext of theOgden bilingual edition. Translated from the German by CK Ogden
http://www.kfs.org/~jonathan/witt/tlph.html
Lugwig Wittgenstein
Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus
Hypertext of the Ogden bilingual edition Translated from the German by C.K. Ogden
With an Introduction by Bertrand Russell

20. Ludwig Wittgenstein Room
ludwig wittgenstein (18891951). wittgenstein links. wittgenstein Archiveat the University of Bergen,Norway; Austrian ludwig wittgenstein Society;
http://www.nobunaga.demon.co.uk/htm/witt.htm
Ludwig Wittgenstein (1889-1951)
Quite a lot of Wittgenstein stuff will be here! This is a link to my BA Dissertation on Wittgenstein on Colour. One Warning:-It is a scanned document with some errors,most of it is just about readable...
Wittgenstein links
Humanities and social sciences link
Back to Philosophy : Hall of Minerva Back to Shino and Ian's Mind and Body Shop Last updated on 20/09/98 by Ian

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