Friday, December 29, 2006

His Unfruitful World

Re:Philosophy Of Wittgenstein(Score:2)
by mercedo (822671) * on 2006.12.29 21:29 (#17397198) (http://www.blogger.com/profile/11854854 Last Journal: 2006.12.29 3:09)
He thought the limit of his language is the limit of his world. This idea is very strange to me. For me there are too many things that weren't verbalised, our mind, our history, our dream, etc. All are unable to verbalise, but they all exist. We only verbalise a part of it and it comes to be literature. In his view there are two possible explanations. One is his language skill was extremely well so he could express almost everything what he thought. The other one is his inner world was extremely poor, almost nothing, so he was merely able to express his dark unfruitful world. I suspect the latter case. He must be a numerological genius, but I was not impreesed with his language. I'm afraid his world was as dark as his poor language.
--Ancient Greek Philosophers -18c Enlightenment Thinkers -Slashdotters

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