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Tables of Contents for Ludwig Wittgenstein
Chapter/Section Title
Page #
Page Count
Acknowledgements
xi
Chronological Table of Reprinted Chapters and Articles
xvii
Preface
xxv
Introduction
1
15
VOLUME I THE EARLY WITTGENSTEIN: FROM THE NOTE BOOKS TO THE PHILOSOPHICAL GRAMMAR
Wittgenstein: whose philosopher?
16
15
Cambridge, Jena or Vienna? The roots of the Tractatus
31
20
Logical solipsism - reading Wittgenstein's notebooks
51
9
Was Wittgenstein Frege's heir?
60
20
On saying and showing
80
23
Between metaphysics and nonsense: elucidation in Wittgenstein's Tractatus
103
22
The tension at the core of the Tractatus
125
7
Naming, thinking and meaning in the Tractatus
132
15
Wittgenstein's early philosophy of mind
147
7
Wittgenstein and the Vienna Circle
154
9
Throwing away the ladder
163
22
Im Anfang war die Tat
185
19
Wittgenstein and the color incompatibility problem
204
15
Philosophy in the Big Typescript
219
16
Wittgenstein and the problem of phenomenology
235
27
The `middle Wittgenstein': from logical atomism to practical holism
262
VOLUME II THE LATER WITTGENSTEIN: FROM PHILOSOPHICAL INVESTIGATIONS TO CERTAINTY
Wittgenstein and his commentators
1
6
Wittgenstein on the nature of philosophy
7
19
There is in Wittgenstein's work no argument and no conclusion
26
13
No chapter `on philosophy' in the Philosophical Investigations
39
13
Philosophical Investigations section 128: `theses in philosophy' and undogmatic procedure
52
16
Philosophical Investigations section 22: neglected aspects
68
27
Language and conversation: Wittgenstein's builders
95
21
Adelheid and the bishop - what's the game?
116
10
Language, language games and ostensive definition
126
8
Wittgenstein on language and rules
134
24
Malcolm on language and rules
158
13
In what sense is logic something sublime?
171
25
Wittgenstein on 2, 2, 2: the opening of Remarks on the Foundations of Mathematics
196
36
Wittgenstein's Inversion of Godel's Theorem
232
33
Wittgenstein's anti-Platonism
265
19
Wittgenstein's Remarks on Color
284
22
Wittgenstein's `scepticism' in On Certainty
306
19
Wittgenstein's Nachlass
325
VOLUME III MEANING AND MIND: WITTGENSTEIN AND THE SCIENCES OF MIND
Wittgenstein on mind and metaphysics
1
10
Wittgenstein's alleged metaphysics of mind
11
9
Criteria and conceptual change in Wittgenstein's later philosophy
20
10
Some thinking about thinking
30
13
Wittgenstein on sensuous experiences
43
21
`Das Wollen ist auch nur eine Erfahrung'
64
20
The private language argument
84
35
Moore's paradox revisited
119
14
The `mind' as a chimera for the sciences in the twentieth century
133
10
Discourse and mind
143
19
Wittgenstein's legacy and the challenge to psychology
162
21
Wittgenstein on Freud's `abominable mess'
183
25
Psychoanalysis: a form of life?
208
17
Wittgenstein and psychology: on our `hook up' to reality
225
17
Toward a Wittgensteinian social psychology of human development
242
21
The philosophical significance of learning in Wittgenstein's later philosophy
263
29
Wittgenstein and cognitive science: some cognitive biases of cognitivism
292
14
The conflict between Wittgenstein and Quine on the nature of language and cognition and its implications for constraint theory
306
34
Wittgenstein and view of artificial intelligence
340
36
Plato, Wittgenstein and artificial intelligence
376
VOLUME IV CULTURE AND CONTEXT: WITTGENSTEIN AND THE HUMAN SCIENCES
Declining decline: Wittgenstein as a philosopher of culture
1
12
Wittgenstein and the twentieth century
13
18
Wittgenstein and post-war philosophy at Oxford
31
23
Wittgenstein and anthropology
54
27
The living language: Wittgenstein and the empirical Study of communication
81
34
The things we do with words: Ilongot speech acts theory in philosophy
115
1
A Wittgenstein and perspective in linguistics
115
56
Do you understand? Criteria of understanding in verbal interaction
171
13
Creation and re-creation: the interplay of activity and structure in language
184
18
The social nature of the function of nature of language
202
26
Chomsky's problems
228
28
The rudiments of language
256
22
Common behaviour of many a kind: Philosophical Investigations section 206
278
12
If a lion could talk...
290
15
`I heard a plaintive melody': (Philosophical Investigations, p.209)
305
22
Wittgenstein on Toistoi's what is Art?
327