Wittgenstein On Certainty and Kant
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I explained how Wittgenstein's "On Certainty" is traceable to Kant's Challenge to the Philosophical Realist's Scandal of Philosophy, in that they are unable to prove the existence of an absolutely mind-independent external world.
My question is what is the main and most fundamental theme of Wittgenstein "On Certainty" in addressing and explaining Moore was barking up the wrong three is taking up Kant's challenge?
Wittgenstein did not write any book titled "On Certainty". This title was generated by the compilers of W's related notes. It is likely the title 'On Certainty' may be misleading and not representing the fundamental main theme of W's intents.
Perhaps a better title would be 'An Exposition of Moore's Counter to Kant's Scandal of Philosophy' or something like that.
Here is the Preface to the book.
Note: In trying to abstract what is Wittgenstein's main theme is this case, do not forget the main theme of Kant's Challenge, else it is non-sequitor.Preface
What we publish here belongs to the last year and a half of Wittgenstein's life.
In the middle of 1949 he visited the United States at the invitation of Norman Malcolm, staying at Malcolm's house in Ithaca.
Malcolm acted as a goad to his interest in Moore's 'defence of common sense', that is to say his claim to know a number of propositions for sure, such as
"Here is one hand, and here is another", and
"The earth existed for a long time before my birth", and
"I have never been far from the earth's surface".
The first of these comes in Moore's 'Proof of the External World'.
The two others are in his 'Defence of Common Sense'; Wittgenstein had long been interested in these and had said to Moore that this was his best article. Moore had agreed.
This book contains the whole of what Wittgenstein wrote on this topic from that time until his death.
It is all first-draft material, which he did not live to excerpt and polish.
The material falls into four parts; we have shown the divisions at #65, #192, #299.
What we believe to be the first part was written on twenty loose sheets of lined foolscap, undated.
These Wittgenstein left in his room in G.E.M. Anscombe's house in Oxford, where he lived (apart from a visit to Norway in the autumn) from April 1950 to February 1951.
I (G.E.M.A.) am under the impression that he had written them in Vienna, where he stayed from the previous Christmas until March; but I cannot now recall the basis of this impression.
The rest is in small notebooks, containing dates; towards the end, indeed, the date of writing is always given.
The last entry is two days before his death on April 29th 1951.
We have left the dates exactly as they appear in the manuscripts.
The numbering of the single sections, however, is by the Editors.
It seemed appropriate to publish this work by itself.
It is not a selection; Wittgenstein marked it off in his notebooks as a separate topic, which he apparently took up at four separate periods during this eighteen months.
It constitutes a single sustained treatment of the topic.
G.E.M. Anscombe; G.H. von Wright