- On Certainty
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Part of a series on Ludwig Wittgenstein Early Philosophy of Ludwig Wittgenstein Picture theory of language
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Logical necessityLater Philosophy of Ludwig Wittgenstein Meaning is use · Language-games
Private language argument
Family resemblance · Rule following
Forms of life · Grammar
Anti-skepticism
Wittgenstein's philosophy of mathematicsMovements Analytic philosophy · Linguistic turn
Ideal language philosophy
Logical atomism · Logical positivism
Ordinary language philosophy
Wittgensteinian fideism · QuietismWorks Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus
Some Remarks on Logical Form
Blue and Brown Books · Philosophical Remarks
Philosophical Investigations
On Certainty · Culture and Value
Remarks on Frazer's Golden Bough
Remarks on the Foundations of Mathematics
Zettel · Remarks on Colour
People Bertrand Russell · G.E. Moore
John Maynard Keynes · Paul Engelmann
Friedrich Waismann · Moritz Schlick
Rudolf Carnap · Francis Skinner
Frank Ramsey · Vienna Circle
G.E.M. Anscombe · Norman Malcolm
Rush Rhees · Peter Winch
Peter Geach · G.H. von WrightInterpreters Barry Stroud · Cora Diamond
Peter Hacker · Terry Eagleton
Stephen Toulmin · Saul Kripke
Anthony Kenny · Crispin Wright
Warren Goldfarb · James F. Conant
Gordon Baker · Stanley Cavell
D.Z. Phillips · Colin McGinn
Jaakko Hintikka · Oswald Hanfling
A.C. Grayling · Rupert ReadOther Apostles · Moral Sciences Club
Stonborough HouseOn Certainty (Über Gewißheit) is a philosophical book composed from the notes written by Ludwig Wittgenstein just prior to his death. Some of the notes were left at the home of G. E. M. Anscombe, who later compiled the notes into a book.
The book's concerns are largely epistemological, its main theme being that there are some things which must be exempt from doubt in order for human practices to be possible (i.e. 'doubt' being a practice as well). The book takes as its starting point the 'here is a hand' argument made by G. E. Moore and examines the place of claims to know in our knowledge.
Another important point is his claim that all doubt is embedded into underlying beliefs and therefore that the most radical forms of doubt must be rejected since they form a contradiction within the system that expressed them. Wittgenstein also provides a novel refutation of various forms of philosophical skepticism. The book was published posthumously in 1969 from notebooks written in the last two years of his life.
See also
External links
- On Certainty - translation by Denis Paul and G. E. M. Anscombe
Skepticism Types Skeptical hypotheses Responses Related articles Categories:- Analytic philosophy literature
- Philosophy books
- Unfinished books
- Books by Ludwig Wittgenstein
- Philosophy book stubs
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