menu-iconExamlexExamLexServices

Discover

Ask a Question
  1. All Topics
  2. Topic
    Philosophy
  3. Study Set
    The Great Conversation A Historical Introduction to Philosophy
  4. Exam
    Exam 26: Ludwig Wittgenstein: Linguistic Analysis and Ordinary Language
  5. Question
    When He Ends by Saying, "This Is Simply What I
Solved

When He Ends by Saying, "This Is Simply What I

Question 17

Question 17

Essay

When he ends by saying, "This is simply what I do," is Wittgenstein giving up on the quest for wisdom, or is he trying to reconceive what wisdom consists in? Explain.

Correct Answer:

Answered by ExamLex AI

Answered by ExamLex AI

Wittgenstein's statement, "This is simpl...

View Answer

Unlock this answer now
Get Access to more Verified Answers free of charge

Related Questions

Q12: What does Wittgenstein understand by the term

Q13: In the Tractatus, Wittgenstein identified the basic

Q14: What are philosophical problems like, according to

Q15: What does it mean to say that

Q16: Language-games show us<br>A) that all words signify

Q18: Philosophers such as Ryle and Austin advocate

Q19: Compare the similarities and differences in Wittgenstein's

Q20: Wittgenstein now says that philosophical problems<br>A) are

Q21: With respect to the claim "There exists

Q22: When Wittgenstein says, "My spade is turned,"

Examlex

ExamLex

About UsContact UsPerks CenterHomeschoolingTest Prep

Work With Us

Campus RepresentativeInfluencers

Links

FaqPricingChrome Extension

Download The App

Get App StoreGet Google Play

Policies

Privacy PolicyTerms of ServiceHonor CodeCommunity Guidelines

Scan To Download

qr-code

Copyright © (2025) ExamLex LLC.

Privacy PolicyTerms Of ServiceHonor CodeCommunity Guidelines