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Return to Great Conversation 8e Student Resources
Chapter 26 Self-Quiz
Quiz Content
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Russell's theory of definite descriptions
explains the logic of phrases having the form"so-and-so."
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assimilates the logic of definite descriptions to the logic of names.
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assumes that definite descriptions have meaning only in the context of a sentence.
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shows that definite descriptions are either true or false.
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In Wittgenstein's Tractatus, every picture is taken to be
a fact.
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made up of elementary sentences "glued together" by logical words.
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a tautology.
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a picture of a fact.
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The world, according to the Tractatus, is
a very complex thing.
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all the possible states of affairs.
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what would be pictured in the totality of true propositions.
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unknowable.
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Language, in the Tractatus view,
is composed partly of sense and partly of nonsense.
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says nothing, but shows itself.
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is obscure and needs to be reformed in the direction of an ideal language.
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is, in the last analysis, composed of names in relation.
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Tautologies, Wittgenstein tells us,
can be known to be true a priori.
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are pictures of very peculiar facts.
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show nothing.
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are sometimes true and sometimes false, and you need a truth table to tell you when one is the case and when the other is.
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Wittgenstein's main aim in the Tractatus is to
explain the nature of language.
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give an account of how natural science is a priori knowable.
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set a limit to thought.
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make accessible the results of the new logic.
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About the part of the Tractatus that Wittgenstein did not write, he said that
it is composed of nonsense.
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it is the more important part.
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it deals with that part of natural science that remains to be discovered.
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he would write that part in a subsequent volume.
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About the meaning of life, Wittgenstein holds that
only science can help us here.
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language has so far been inadequate to the task of expressing it, but there is hope that it may be developed so as to solve the riddle.
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the riddle can be answered in the clear words of the Tractatus.
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the solution lies in the vanishing of the problem.
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About philosophy, Wittgenstein tells us:
its task is to tell us the truth about ourselves.
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it is not an activity, but a body of doctrine.
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it aims at clarity.
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when properly understood, it can be seen to be identical with science.
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According to the verifiability criterion of factual meaningfulness,
propositions about God must be verifiable, since they deal with a factual question.
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the meaning of an ethical proposition consists in its conditions of verifiability.
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the criterion is itself verifiable.
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nothing unverifiable can be meaningful.
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Logical positivists
tend to take the âobjectsâ of the Tractatus to be sense data.
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agree with Wittgenstein about the importance of the mystical.
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agree with Wittgenstein that ethical propositions express the feelings or sentiments of an individual.
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admit they are talking nonsense when they set out the conditions of meaningful language.
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