Abstract
We discuss a previously unnoticed resemblance between the theory of relations
and predicates in The Philosophy of Logical Atomism [TPLA] by Russell and the theory
of objects and names in the Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus [TLP] by Wittgenstein.
Points of likeness are detected on three levels: ontology, syntax, and semantics. This
analogy explains the prima facie similarities between the informal presentation of the
theory of types in TPLA and the sections of the TLP devoted to this same topic. Eventually, we draw some consequences concerning both sides of the analogy: for what
concerns Russell, the contextual pertinence of this surprising fragment of Tractarian
metaphysics and semantics is questioned on several grounds; about Wittgenstein, the
interpreters who do not identify Tractarian objects with particulars are in a better position to make sense of the analogy here discovered.