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Full Idea
The great problem around which everything turns that I write is: is there an order in the world a priori, and if so what does it consist in?
Gist of Idea
My main problem is the order of the world, and whether it is knowable a priori
Source
Ludwig Wittgenstein (Notebooks 1914-1916 [1915], 15.06.01)
Book Ref
Wittgenstein,Ludwig: 'Notebooks 1914-1916 (2nd ed)' [Blackwell 1979], p.53
A Reaction
Morris identifies this as a 'Kantian question'. I trace it back to stoicism. This question has never bothered me. It just seems weird to think that you can infer reality from the examination of your own thinking. Perhaps I should take it more seriously?
Related Ideas
Idea 23485 No pictures are true a priori [Wittgenstein]
Idea 23501 There is no a priori order of things [Wittgenstein]
6563 | 'And' and 'not' are non-referring terms, which do not represent anything [Wittgenstein, by Fogelin] |
23481 | Propositions assemble a world experimentally, like the model of a road accident [Wittgenstein] |
23500 | My main problem is the order of the world, and whether it is knowable a priori [Wittgenstein] |
22323 | The philosophical I is the metaphysical subject, the limit - not a part of the world [Wittgenstein] |
18276 | A statement's logical form derives entirely from its constituents [Wittgenstein] |
16908 | We can dispense with self-evidence, if language itself prevents logical mistakes [Jeshion on Wittgenstein] |
18274 | Analysis complicates a statement, but only as far as the complexity of its meaning [Wittgenstein] |
4678 | Absolute prohibitions are the essence of ethics, and suicide is the most obvious example [Wittgenstein] |
23472 | The sense of propositions relies on the world's basic logical structure [Wittgenstein] |