Meaning, the Experience of Meaning and the Meaning-Blind in Wittgenstein’s Late Philosophy

The Monist 78 (4):480-495 (1995)
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Abstract

Wittgenstein’s first account of meaning was that sentences are pictures: the meaning of a sentence is a state of affairs it portrays. States of affairs are arrangements of some basic entities, the Objects. Sentences consist of names of Objects; an arrangement of such names, i.e., a sentence, shows how the named Objects are arranged. A sentence says that the state of affairs it thus pictures exists, hence it is true or false. That theory of meaning as picturing is based on a primitive relation of naming, but what it is for an item to name another the Tractatus does not say.

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