This book proposes to examine the centraldoctrines of Wittgenstein’s Tractatus from a transcendental point of view. Wittgenstein has been treated for long as an empiricist and positivist thinker. This has resulted in a total distortion of Wittgenstein’s philosophy in the Tractatus. I have tried to rectify the distortion by showing that Wittgenstein has argued for a transcendental point of view which sets the limits of language and scientific thought. Wittgenstein does not take the scientific way of understanding reality as fundamental to philosophy, because science does not represent the whole of reality. Philosophy, according to him, sets limits to science and scientific thought and allows for religion and ethics which introduce the higher realms of thought not expressible in scientific language. Hence, Wittgenstein’s plea for the Transcendental and the Mystical. The book brings Wittgenstein’s thought closer to that of the Vedant by showing that Wittgenstein echoes the Vedantic idea that the ultimate reality is beyond language and intellect.
Philosophy, Culture and Value: Essays on the Thoughts of G.C. Pande
Govind Chandra Pande, b. ...
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