Abstract
Some scholars suggest a puzzle presents itself in Ludwig Wittgenstein's final words in the mismatch between what Norman Malcolm describes as a ‘fiercely unhappy’ life and Wittgenstein's expression of that life as ‘wonderful’. Ronald L. Hall attempts to overcome the apparent puzzle by retranslating Wittgenstein's final words into an expression of an awakening to the wonder inherent in reality. Beth Savickey argues that Hall's approach is a philosophical abstraction that diminishes the significance of friendship in Wittgenstein's life and that these friendships are what made Wittgenstein's life ‘wonderful’. I argue that Hall's and Savickey's accounts of wonder and friendship go wrong as attempts to explain away the apparent puzzle of Wittgenstein's final words. Drawing on remarks from Raimond Gaita, I argue that both aspects can be incorporated into a dissolution of the apparent puzzle if Wittgenstein's final words are heard in the register of an expression of gratitude from a perspective of his life as a whole sub specie aeterni.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 162-183 |
| Journal | Philosophical Investigations |
| Volume | 48 |
| Issue number | 2 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - Apr 2025 |
| MoE publication type | A1 Journal article-refereed |
Funding
Thank you to Camilla Kronqvist, Chon Tejedor, Michael Campbell, Lars Hertzberg, Merete Mazzarella, Tommi Uschanov, as well as the participants of the Reconsideration of Wittgenstein's Cultural Background and Context Workshop, 20\u201322 September 2024 at Tokyo Metropolitan University, Japan, and the \u00C5bo Akademi University Forskarseminarium i filosofi, 11 November 2024, for helpful comments and discussion on earlier drafts of this article.
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