Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 Wittgenstein's philosophical remarks
- 2 Wittgenstein on meaning and meaning-blindness
- 3 Language-games and private language
- 4 Wittgenstein on family resemblance
- 5 Ordinary/everyday language
- 6 Wittgenstein on rule-following
- 7 Thinking and understanding
- 8 Psychologism and Philosophical Investigations
- 9 Moore's paradox revisited
- 10 Aspect perception
- 11 Knowing that the standard metre is one metre long
- 12 Therapy
- 13 Criteria
- 14 Grammatical investigations
- 15 Teaching and learning
- 16 Expression and avowal
- Chronology of Wittgenstein's life
- Bibliography
- Index
16 - Expression and avowal
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 Wittgenstein's philosophical remarks
- 2 Wittgenstein on meaning and meaning-blindness
- 3 Language-games and private language
- 4 Wittgenstein on family resemblance
- 5 Ordinary/everyday language
- 6 Wittgenstein on rule-following
- 7 Thinking and understanding
- 8 Psychologism and Philosophical Investigations
- 9 Moore's paradox revisited
- 10 Aspect perception
- 11 Knowing that the standard metre is one metre long
- 12 Therapy
- 13 Criteria
- 14 Grammatical investigations
- 15 Teaching and learning
- 16 Expression and avowal
- Chronology of Wittgenstein's life
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
But that which is in him, how can I see it? Between his experience and me there is always the expression!
Here is the picture: He sees it immediately, I only mediately. But that's not the way it is. He doesn't see something and describe it to us.
(LWPP II 92)I am often able to say what is on, or in, my own mind, that is, what I want, believe, fear, expect, intend or hope; whether I am feeling joy or pain; whether I like the taste of this wine or find that joke funny. I seem, moreover, to manage this sort of self-ascription, or avowal, without needing to rely on the evidence that other people require in order to ascribe mental states to me. In his late work, Wittgenstein often writes about psychological self-ascriptions. Again and again he suggests that, in doing philosophy, we are liable to cling to one or another bad explanation or misleading picture of them. He aims to reorient our thinking about avowals by urging us to view them as expressions, and so to see a sincere utterance of “I am in pain” as akin to a pained wince or groan. My aim in what follows is to provide an introduction to this strand in his writing.
A good place to begin is with the quotation above – our epigraph – which was written during the final two weeks of Wittgenstein's life. In it, he sketches a “picture” that we can think of as comprising two claims.
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- WittgensteinKey Concepts, pp. 185 - 198Publisher: Acumen PublishingPrint publication year: 2010
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