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(2014) Synthese 191 (14).

Wittgenstein and the dualism of the inner and the outer

Hao Tang

pp. 3173-3194

A dualism characteristic of modern philosophy is the conception of the inner and the outer as two independently intelligible domains. Wittgenstein’s attack on this dualism contains deep insights. The main insight (excavated from §304 and §293 of the Philosophical Investigations) is this: our sensory consciousness is deeply shaped by language and this shaping plays a fundamental role in the etiology of the dualism. I locate this role in the learning of a sensation-language (as described in §244), by showing that this learning is, under another aspect, the incision of language, namely the infliction of cuts upon certain natural-primitive unities between the inner and the outer. These cuts, driven by powerful forces, eventually harden into an entrenched division between the inner and the outer, thereby providing a constant soil for the dualism. That this dualism is rooted in the very learning of a language is cause for ambivalence about language.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/s11229-014-0441-2

Full citation:

Tang, H. (2014). Wittgenstein and the dualism of the inner and the outer. Synthese 191 (14), pp. 3173-3194.

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