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Loading... Wittgensteinby William Warren Bartley
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. This biography covers the life of Ludwig Wittgenstein in a vivid and interesting manner. Both his early life and later philosophical career are written with a reasonable style and approach that conveys the uniqueness of both the man and his philosophy. ( ) William Warren Bartley III has done a valuable work of biographical research by going to the villages where Wittgenstein 'retired' to do primary school teaching between his 'early' period and his 'late' period and interviewing the people of the village. He uncovers a lot of anecdotes and fills out what was somewhat of a hole in the previous knowledge of Wittgensteins life. Philosophically, he also gives part of the explanation to what may have caused the change of Wittgensteins philosopy between the early and the late period, by setting it in context to the ideas and principles of the Austrian reform-pedagogy that he was part of. And, implicitly, to the practical work of teaching. This is an important contribution to the biography of Wittgenstein and to the understanding of the development of his philosophy and may help us better interpret his philosophy. The book is very accessible, but I would not recommend it as an introduction to Wittgenstein, as Bartley is simply not the best of Wittgenstein scholars and it is hard to give a proper account of Wittgensteins philosophy when your focus is a period of his life when he was not active as a philosopher. I do find that his comments on how Wittgensteins philosopy differs from Kant were clear and insightful, though. But no review of this book without a mention of his description of Wittgensteins homosexual activities. This is what has made this book famous and is probably also the reason, I decided to read it in the first place. This is the first chapter and it seems to be tagged in front of the rest of the book, which has its own progression of argument. It seems to me that the criticism of this part of the book is valid. He uses anonymous sources who not only gives an account of Wittgenstein that conflicts with all other known sources, but you also ask yourself what exactly it is that this source (or these sources) have told Bartley: is it a Viennese male prostitute who clearly recognizes a picture of one of his clients 50 years later and is able to tell about his habitual actions? If not, what then? And the other supporting arguments are even more shaky. I do not think we should base an account on who did what when and where on Freudian dream-analysis and the argument from his coded remarks is, as far as can understand, marred by the fact that Bartley did not himself actually read these and what his second-hand sources told him, caused him to misrepresent them, There is no doubt that Wittgenstein was homosexual and that he himself (and his surroundings) may have been inclined feel 'awkward' about this, as he belonged to the elite of the Austrian society and the world was not as liberal then as now. But I agree with Monk in his discussion of Bartleys book in his Wittgenstein ("The Duty of Genius") that it seems that Wittgensteins sexual life to an extraordinary extent went on in his imagination and that the idea that all of the elite of Austro-Hungary and the English universities would be so conservative as to want to pull the wool over the eyes of the world (not mentioning succeeding) seems to me a little daft. I think we are witnessing a piece of 'fake history' Cheekily Controversial, but an excellent introductory primer This is a short and very accessible biography. Wittgenstein tends to be widely and divergently interpreted - which goes with the territory, I suppose: with all that talk about language games, you can't really say he's "misunderstood", but there is little consensus as to what his philosophy really means. Not helped, also, by his later work (encapsulated in the Philosophical Investigations) effectively recanting on the logical formalism of his earlier Tractatus Logico Philosophicus. Bartley's life does the extremely valuable service of distilling down the central tenets of Wittgenstein to manageable nuggets rendered at a sufficiently remote level of abstraction that a lay reader should be able to digest them comfortably. Much more entertaining than Marie McGinn's rather humourless Guidebook to Wittgenstein and the Philosophical Investigations, for example. However, this is no dry exposition of the Philosophical Investigations. It is a true biography, covering Wittgenstein's period as an Austrian schoolteacher. Bartley paints a plausible picture of the Philosopher as hermit auteur. He is also obstreporously controversial in writing colourfully of Wittgenstein's taste for a bit of Vienese rough trade in a section which (as Bartley defensively notes in the afterword) occupies just five pages (but it is pretty much the first five!) which appears to have gained this volume some not insignificant literary notoriety on publication in 1973. These days, a spot of Tyrolian cottaging seems almost somewhat tame, if gratuitous, stuff (tame in that it has almost become more controversial to claim a lifetime literary bachelor was *straight* and gratuitous in that, despite a salutary attempt late on, Bartley makes no real effort to link said saucy tendencies to anything more significant in Wittgenstein's life or work, and in fact in a studiously defensive afterword, explicitly rejects the validity of doing just that. Much of the afterword is written with the air of an author-as-fullback looking suspiciously quizzical and innocent while the subject-as-winger writhes in agony on the ground just inside the penalty box, it never being clear who is more deserving of a booking. Nonetheless, it's a quick, clear, entertaining read and will be of particular value for those (like me) seeking an overview and context to this important 20th century philosopher, having discovered that an uncontextualised approach on the north face of the Philosophical Investigations without an experienced sherpa and some preparatory reading oxygen, was a bit of a tall order. Olly Buxton no reviews | add a review
"The portrait that emerges from this account is human, all too human, but the author's respect for Wittgenstein is never in doubt. Though brief and written so that it can be understood by those with no previous knowledge of Wittgenstein's philosophy, this book is an important contribution to our understanding of the man and of the development of his thought." --Walter Kaufmann No library descriptions found. |
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