It is often claimed that certain remarks by Wittgenstein reveal him to have been an unsympathetic reader of Shakespeare and an unappreciative judge of the latter’s achievements. In the present paper, I attempt to show that this sort of observation is not only wrong but due to an inadequate perspective. An examination of the relevant remarks may bring to light a number of more or less interesting principles of evaluation, or aesthetic maxims and appraisals, but these do not say much about Shakespeare’s works, nor are the meant to be instructive in this way. What Wittgenstein’s remarks are really about is his own intellectual physiognomy: it is by way of contrast, by comparing certain features of Shakespeare with what he supposes to be charac...
In this chapter, I argue that the strong fascination Wittgenstein had for artists cannot be explaine...
This thesis examines the relation between philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein’s 1940s writings on seeing...
The question of aesthetic judgment is related to a lot of paradoxes that have marked sustainably the...
Wittgenstein's lack of sympathy for Shakespeare's works has been well noted by George Steiner and Ha...
Wittgenstein's occasional remarks on Shakespeare have raised a considerable amount of interest and b...
Wittgenstein’s posthumously published work contains several references to writers and composers. Amo...
Wittgenstein's thought is reflected in his reading and reception of other authors. "Wittgenstein Rea...
On my reading, Wittgenstein's seemingly anti-philosophical remarks do not reject philosophy as inher...
This essay begins with the claim the reader must grant the author: no person is without a past. Yet ...
Various writings by the later Wittgenstein on the philosophy of psychology, published posthumously, ...
This ambitious book attempts to do just what it says on the tin: rather than offering an assessment ...
The principal thesis for which I will argue is that: not only is Wittgenstein, as is too often thoug...
Wittgenstein comes up with his model simply through starting with the assumption that language can b...
grantor: University of TorontoMy thesis investigates the nature of the relation between be...
In spite of all Wittgenstein’s efforts in making the internal consistency of his late viewpoint, a p...
In this chapter, I argue that the strong fascination Wittgenstein had for artists cannot be explaine...
This thesis examines the relation between philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein’s 1940s writings on seeing...
The question of aesthetic judgment is related to a lot of paradoxes that have marked sustainably the...
Wittgenstein's lack of sympathy for Shakespeare's works has been well noted by George Steiner and Ha...
Wittgenstein's occasional remarks on Shakespeare have raised a considerable amount of interest and b...
Wittgenstein’s posthumously published work contains several references to writers and composers. Amo...
Wittgenstein's thought is reflected in his reading and reception of other authors. "Wittgenstein Rea...
On my reading, Wittgenstein's seemingly anti-philosophical remarks do not reject philosophy as inher...
This essay begins with the claim the reader must grant the author: no person is without a past. Yet ...
Various writings by the later Wittgenstein on the philosophy of psychology, published posthumously, ...
This ambitious book attempts to do just what it says on the tin: rather than offering an assessment ...
The principal thesis for which I will argue is that: not only is Wittgenstein, as is too often thoug...
Wittgenstein comes up with his model simply through starting with the assumption that language can b...
grantor: University of TorontoMy thesis investigates the nature of the relation between be...
In spite of all Wittgenstein’s efforts in making the internal consistency of his late viewpoint, a p...
In this chapter, I argue that the strong fascination Wittgenstein had for artists cannot be explaine...
This thesis examines the relation between philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein’s 1940s writings on seeing...
The question of aesthetic judgment is related to a lot of paradoxes that have marked sustainably the...