@inbook{60447353684640fca27486a073c1874d,
title = "Anscombe{\textquoteright}s Wittgenstein",
abstract = "This chapter examines two closely intertwined themes: Anscombe{\textquoteright}s understanding of Wittgenstein{\textquoteright}s thinking, and his influence on hers. It first sketches Anscombe{\textquoteright}s general sense of Wittgenstein{\textquoteright}s thought and of his influence on her, and her view of his philosophical {\textquoteleft}method{\textquoteright}, which she doesn{\textquoteright}t want to call quite that. Then it traces his pervasive influence in her writings on intention, the first person, and certain problems about meaning, presenting these as unified by a Wittgensteinian critique of the subject-object paradigm of thought. After showing the connection between Anscombe{\textquoteright}s seminal paper {\textquoteleft}Modern Moral Philosophy{\textquoteright} and Wittgenstein{\textquoteright}s diagnosis of metaphysical illusions, it closes by discussing Anscombe{\textquoteright}s and Wittgenstein{\textquoteright}s respective approaches to the question of truth in religion, which may in some respects not be as far apart as they initially appear.",
keywords = "611 Philosophy",
author = "Joel Backstr{\"o}m",
year = "2022",
month = feb,
day = "18",
doi = "10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190887353.013.31",
language = "English",
isbn = "9780190887353",
series = "Oxford handbooks",
publisher = "Oxford University Press",
pages = "415–441",
editor = "Roger Teichmann",
booktitle = "The Oxford Handbook of Elizabeth Anscombe",
address = "United Kingdom",
}