ON THE IMPOSSIBILITY OF THE PHENOMENOLOGICAL LANGUAGE IN THE CONTEXT OF WITTGENSTEIN’S MANUSCRIPTS FROM 1929–1933
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St Petersburg State University
Abstract
The article treats Ludwig Wittgenstein’s manuscripts and typescripts where he formulates the problem
of impossibility of “phenomenological language” defined by him as the “description of immediate sensual
perception without any hypothetical supplementation.” One may find this phase of his philosophy
(1929–1933) a bit paradoxical because the philosopher claims this phase, from the very beginning,
to have been overcome; we deal here with philosophical self-criticism. The Lewis Carroll’s paradox is
considered in terms of analogy to this criticized project of “phenomenological language”—the paradox
of a ridiculously exact map which coincides with the mapped area. We open up new possibilities for
comparison between the Wittgensteinian project of the “primal language” and Husserlian, Heideggerian
and Finkian projects of “phenomenological language.”
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CHERNAVIN G. ON THE IMPOSSIBILITY OF THE PHENOMENOLOGICAL LANGUAGE IN THE CONTEXT OF WITTGENSTEIN’S MANUSCRIPTS FROM 1929–1933. Horizon. Studies in Phenomenology, 2021, vol. 10, issue 1, pp. 258–267.