Potter M.D. Wittgenstein's notes on logic (Oxford; New York, 2009). - ОГЛАВЛЕНИЕ / CONTENTS
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ОбложкаPotter M.D. Wittgenstein's notes on logic. - Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press, 2009. - xii, 310 p.: ill. - Ind.: p.299-303. - Bibliogr.: p.306-310. - ISBN 978-0-19-959635-5
 

Оглавление / Contents
 
Introduction .................................................... 1

1  Finding a problem ............................................ 6
   1.1  Early life .............................................. 6
   1.2  Manchester .............................................. 7
   1.3  The Principles of Mathematics .......................... 10
   1.4  Logicism ............................................... 13
   1.5  Russell's paradox ...................................... 15
2  First steps ................................................. 18
   2.1  Cambridge .............................................. 18
   2.2  On denoting ............................................ 20
   2.3  Sense-data ............................................. 23
3  Matter ...................................................... 26
   3.1  The project ............................................ 26
   3.2  On matter .............................................. 27
   3.3  Dawes Hicks ............................................ 30
   3.4  The relation of sense-data to physics .................. 33
   3.5  The atomistic assumption ............................... 36
4  Analysis .................................................... 39
   4.1  Inference or construction? ............................. 39
   4.2  Wittgenstein's conception .............................. 43
   4.3  Practicalities ......................................... 45
5  The fundamental thought ..................................... 49
   5.1  Why logic? ............................................. 49
   5.2  Logical constants as incomplete symbols ................ 51
   5.3  There are no logical constants ......................... 52
   5.4  There are no real variables ............................ 54
   5.5  Logic as a special science ............................. 57
   5.6  Logic as contentless ................................... 58
   5.7  The fundamental thought ................................ 61
6  The symbolic turn ........................................... 63
   6.1  Propositions ........................................... 63
   6.2  The rejection of psychologism .......................... 64
   6.3  The reliability of language ............................ 66
   6.4  Conflicting conceptions ................................ 68
7  Simplicity .................................................. 70
   7.1  Realism ................................................ 70
   7.2  Solipsism .............................................. 73
   7.3  Idealism ............................................... 74
   7.4  Reconciliation ......................................... 76
8  Unity ....................................................... 78
   8.1  The copula ............................................. 78
   8.2  There cannot be different types of things .............. 80
   8.3  The theory of types is superfluous ..................... 82
9  Fregean propositions ........................................ 86
   9.1  Frege's notion of assertion ............................ 86
   9.2  Propositions are not names of truth-values ............. 88
   9.3  Whose influence? ....................................... 89
   9.4  Propositions as articulate ............................. 91
10 Assertion ................................................... 94
   10.1 The judgment stroke as force indicator ................. 94
   10.2 Asserted and unasserted propositions ................... 95
   10.3 Assertion as psychological ............................. 98
   10.4 Psychology ............................................. 99
11 Complex and fact ........................................... 102
   11.1 A world of facts, not of things ....................... 102
   11.2 Influences ............................................ 104
   11.3 Russell on facts ...................................... 106
12 Forms ...................................................... 109
   12.1 Form as name .......................................... 109
   12.2 Form as function ...................................... 111
   12.3 The form of a fact .................................... 113
   12.4 The unity of the proposition .......................... 114
   12.5 The symbolic turn again ............................... 116
13 Russell's theory of judgment ............................... 118
   13.1 The original multiple relation theory ................. 118
   13.2 A problem for the original theory ..................... 120
   13.3 Russell's revised theory .............................. 122
   13.4 Wittgenstein's further objection ...................... 124
   13.5 Acquaintance .......................................... 125
   13.6 Another formulation ................................... 126
   13.7 The fate of the multiple relation theory .............. 128
   13.8 Other accounts ........................................ 129
14 Meaning .................................................... 132
   14.1 Russell's lectures on logical atomism ................. 133
   14.2 Propositions are not names of their meanings .......... 135
   14.3 Meanings as facts ..................................... 137
   14.4 The demise of prepositional meaning ................... 140
15 Metaphysics ................................................ 142
   15.1 Disjunctive facts ..................................... 142
   15.2 Negative facts ........................................ 143
   15.3 Summing facts ......................................... 145
   15.4 General facts ......................................... 147
   15.5 Logical data .......................................... 149
16 Sense ...................................................... 151
   16.1 Semantic value ........................................ 151
   16.2 The semantic value of a form .......................... 153
   16.3 The compass-needle analogy ............................ 155
   16.4 Grain ................................................. 156
17 Truth-functions ............................................ 158
   17.1 Using primitive signs ................................. 158
   17.2 Truth-tables .......................................... 160
   17.3 Truth-diagrams ........................................ 161
   17.4 Comparison ............................................ 163
   18 Truth-operations ........................................ 165
   18.1 The problem ........................................... 165
   18.2 The solution .......................................... 166
   18.3 Duality ............................................... 168
19 Molecular propositions ..................................... 170
   19.1 Terminology ........................................... 170
   19.2 Which fact? ........................................... 171
   19.3 Poles ................................................. 173
   19.4 The inputs ............................................ 174
20 Generality ................................................. 177
   20.1 Variables as classes of propositions .................. 177
   20.2 Notation .............................................. 180
   20.3 Undecidability ........................................ 181
21 Resolving the paradoxes .................................... 184
   21.1 Russell's theory of types ............................. 184
   21.2 Wittgenstein's vicious circle principle ............... 186
   21.3 Types as classes of propositions ...................... 188
   21.4 Types and molecular propositions ...................... 189
   21.5 Types and generality .................................. 190
   21.6 Uniting generality and truth-functions ................ 191
   21.7 The general form of proposition ....................... 192
   21.8 Unsayability .......................................... 194
22 Typical ambiguity .......................................... 196
   22.1 Typical ambiguity ..................................... 196
   22.2 Independent indefinables .............................. 199
   22.3 Whitehead ............................................. 200
23 Identity ................................................... 204
   23.1 Russell's definition .................................. 204
   23.2 Eliminating identity .................................. 206
   23.3 The notational problem ................................ 207
24 Sign and symbol ............................................ 209
   24.1 Seeing through to the symbol .......................... 209
   24.2 Same sign, different symbol ........................... 210
   24.3 Same symbol, different sign ........................... 212
   24.4 Symbol in terms of sign ............................... 214
   24.5 The symbol vanishes ................................... 216
25 Wittgenstein's theory of judgment .......................... 218
   25.1 Russell's later views ................................. 218
   25.2 The theory of judgment in the Notes ................... 219
   25.3 Wittgenstein's later theory of judgment ............... 220
   25.4 Ramsey ................................................ 222
26 The picture theory ......................................... 224
   26.1 Coincidence of structure .............................. 224
   26.2 The picturing analogy ................................. 226
   26.3 Truth ................................................. 227
   26.4 The identity theory ................................... 229
   26.5 Possibility ........................................... 231
27 Tractarian objects ......................................... 232
   27.1 Relations as objects .................................. 232
   27.2 Widening the scope .................................... 233
   27.3 Facts in the Tractates ................................ 236
   27.4 Confusion? ............................................ 237
28 Philosophy ................................................. 241
   28.1 Metaphysics ........................................... 241
   28.2 Psychology ............................................ 243
   28.3 Epistemology .......................................... 244
   28.4 Value ................................................. 245
29 Themes ..................................................... 249
   29.1 Working methods ....................................... 249
   29.2 Characteristics ....................................... 250
   29.3 What if ............................................... 253
   29.4 Fundamental thoughts .................................. 254
   29.5 Influences on Wittgenstein ............................ 255
   29.6 Influence on Russell .................................. 259
   29.7 Influence on Frege .................................... 260
   29.8 Conclusion ............................................ 261

A  History of the text ........................................ 263
   A.1  Narrative ............................................. 263
   A.2  The manuscripts ....................................... 265
   A.3  Russell's labelling ................................... 268
   A.4  The Costello version .................................. 271
   A.5  Wittgenstein's dissertation ........................... 274
   A.6  Conclusion ............................................ 274
В  The Notes on Logic ......................................... 276
   The Birmingham Mites ....................................... 276
   The Cambridge Motes ........................................ 284
   Textual notes .............................................. 290
   The Costello version ....................................... 292

Citations ..................................................... 297
   Notes on Logic ............................................. 297
   Tractatus .................................................. 297

Index ......................................................... 299

Bibliography .................................................. 305
   Primary sources ............................................ 305
   Secondary sources .......................................... 306


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