Wittgenstein on Perspicuous Presentations and Grammatical Self-Knowledge

The task of this paper is to exhibit Wittgenstein’s method of perspicuous presentation as aiming at a distinctive kind of self-knowledge. Three influential readings of Wittgenstein’s concept of perspicuous presentation – Hacker’s, Baker’s and Sluga’s – are examined. All of them present what Wittgens...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Christian Georg Martin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nordic Wittgenstein Society 2016-06-01
Series:Nordic Wittgenstein Review
Online Access:http://www.nordicwittgensteinreview.com/article/view/3365
id doaj-8130f69be41048eeb70ff7b0ec53e807
record_format Article
spelling doaj-8130f69be41048eeb70ff7b0ec53e8072020-11-24T22:29:36ZengNordic Wittgenstein SocietyNordic Wittgenstein Review2194-68252242-248X2016-06-01791083365Wittgenstein on Perspicuous Presentations and Grammatical Self-KnowledgeChristian Georg Martin0Ludwig Maximilans University, MunichThe task of this paper is to exhibit Wittgenstein’s method of perspicuous presentation as aiming at a distinctive kind of self-knowledge. Three influential readings of Wittgenstein’s concept of perspicuous presentation – Hacker’s, Baker’s and Sluga’s – are examined. All of them present what Wittgenstein calls the “unsurveyablity of our grammar” as a result of the “complexity” of our language. Contrary to this, a fundamental difference between matter-of-factual complexity and the unsurveyability of grammar is pointed out. What perspicuous presentations are designed to deal with, isn’t, accordingly, occasioned by the complexity of our language but by an unnoticed assimilation of our own activities as speaking beings to matter-of-factual affairs. In response to this, perspicuous presentations help us to fully appropriate our activities as speakers in virtue of achieving a transparent understanding of the use of “our words”. It thus provides us with a distinctive kind of grammatical self-knowledge.http://www.nordicwittgensteinreview.com/article/view/3365
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christian Georg Martin
spellingShingle Christian Georg Martin
Wittgenstein on Perspicuous Presentations and Grammatical Self-Knowledge
Nordic Wittgenstein Review
author_facet Christian Georg Martin
author_sort Christian Georg Martin
title Wittgenstein on Perspicuous Presentations and Grammatical Self-Knowledge
title_short Wittgenstein on Perspicuous Presentations and Grammatical Self-Knowledge
title_full Wittgenstein on Perspicuous Presentations and Grammatical Self-Knowledge
title_fullStr Wittgenstein on Perspicuous Presentations and Grammatical Self-Knowledge
title_full_unstemmed Wittgenstein on Perspicuous Presentations and Grammatical Self-Knowledge
title_sort wittgenstein on perspicuous presentations and grammatical self-knowledge
publisher Nordic Wittgenstein Society
series Nordic Wittgenstein Review
issn 2194-6825
2242-248X
publishDate 2016-06-01
description The task of this paper is to exhibit Wittgenstein’s method of perspicuous presentation as aiming at a distinctive kind of self-knowledge. Three influential readings of Wittgenstein’s concept of perspicuous presentation – Hacker’s, Baker’s and Sluga’s – are examined. All of them present what Wittgenstein calls the “unsurveyablity of our grammar” as a result of the “complexity” of our language. Contrary to this, a fundamental difference between matter-of-factual complexity and the unsurveyability of grammar is pointed out. What perspicuous presentations are designed to deal with, isn’t, accordingly, occasioned by the complexity of our language but by an unnoticed assimilation of our own activities as speaking beings to matter-of-factual affairs. In response to this, perspicuous presentations help us to fully appropriate our activities as speakers in virtue of achieving a transparent understanding of the use of “our words”. It thus provides us with a distinctive kind of grammatical self-knowledge.
url http://www.nordicwittgensteinreview.com/article/view/3365
work_keys_str_mv AT christiangeorgmartin wittgensteinonperspicuouspresentationsandgrammaticalselfknowledge
_version_ 1725743927057711104