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Wittgenstein on Freud and Frazer

These essays examine Wittgenstein's reflections on the comparative claims of clarification and empirical enquiry.

Frank Cioffi (Author)

9780521593076, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 13 July 1998

324 pages
23.6 x 15.9 x 2.3 cm, 0.56 kg

' … the essays are excellent, both as interpretation and as criticism.' The Times Literary Supplement

What is it that troubles and preoccupies us about the anxieties and anguishes of social and private life? Have advances in the disciplines of psychoanalysis, psychology or the social sciences in general ministered to our needs in these areas? In this forcefully argued collection of essays, Frank Cioffi examines Wittgenstein's reflections on the comparative claims of clarification and empirical enquiry. Though writing out of admiration and indebtedness, he expresses reservations as to the limits Wittgenstein places on the relevance and desirability of empirical knowledge. His discusssions extend from Wittgenstein's reflections on human sacrifice and other ritual practices dealt with by Frazer to Freud's account of the sources of anxiety, depression, dreams and laughter. He asks both whether it is empirical investigation or more lucid reflection that these phenomena demand, and what kind of question this itself is.

Introduction
1. Information, contemplation and social life
2. Aesthetic explanation and aesthetic perplexity
3. Wittgenstein and the fire festivals
4. When do empirical methods by-pass the problems which trouble us?
5. Explanation, self-clarification and solace
6. Wittgenstein on making homeopathic magic clear
7. Wittgenstein and obscurantism
8. Wittgenstein on Freud's 'abominable mess'
9. Congenital transcendentalism and 'the loneliness which is the truth about things'
Afterword
10. Explanation and self-clarification in Frazer
11. Explanation and self-clarification in Freud
12. Conclusion: two cheers for the coroner's report.

Subject Areas: Western philosophy, from c 1900 - [HPCF]

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