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Tag Archives: etymology
Wittgenstein on Philosophy, Pt. II
This follows Wittgenstein on Philosophy. We are beginning to plumb Wittgenstein’s concepts deeply. It took 5 books to get to this point – but I audaciously believe that I can illuminate his intentions better than the several rehashed critical essays I have … Continue reading
Posted in General Philosophies
Tagged confusion, Dali, epistemology, etymology, Faulkner quote on time, form, grammar, Ideas, language, language games, Ludwig Wittgenstein, meaning, old french, Philosophy, questions, questions of why, Salvador Dali, science, situations, spelling, St. Augustine, the blue book, time, why, William Faulkner, Wittgenstein
6 Comments
Maya – “All Duality Is Falsely Imagined”
This post is in response to Delineation. “Translated into conventional and – let it be repeated – mytho-poetic language, the knowledge of Brahman is represented as the discovery that this world which seemed to be Many is in truth One, … Continue reading
Posted in General Philosophies, Quotes
Tagged Alan Watts, borders, boundaries, Brahman, Buddhism, class, convention, delineation, differences, distinction, distinctions, division, duality, etymology, fact, Greco-Roman, Hinduiusm, illusion, imagination, India, Indian philosophy, language, Latin, maya, measure, measurement, nonsense, one, perception, reality, Sanskrit
3 Comments
Wittgenstein’s Most Cherished Emphasis
“What we cannot speak of we must pass over in silence” Ludwig Wittgenstein
Posted in Quotes
Tagged correlation, epistemology, etymology, facts, knowledge, logic, logical positivism, objects, ontology, proposition, sense, Structure, Wittgenstein, world
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