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Did Wittgenstein Speak with the Vulgar or Think with the Learned? Or Did He do Both?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 June 2007

John W. Cook
Affiliation:
Chico, California

Extract

Wittgenstein has often been criticized, and even dismissed, for being a patron of ordinary language, a champion of the vernacular, a defender of the status quo. One critic has written: ‘When Wittgenstein set up the actual use of language as a standard, that was equivalent to accepting a certain set up of culture and belief as a standard … It is lucky no such philosophy was thought of until recently or we should still be under the sway of witch doctors …’ In what follows I want to show just how wide of the mark criticisms of this sort are.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Institute of Philosophy 2007

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