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E-raamat: Peeling Potatoes or Grinding Lenses: Spinoza and Young Wittgenstein Converse on Immanence and Its Logic

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  • Ilmumisaeg: 13-Mar-2014
  • Kirjastus: University of Pittsburgh Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780822977902
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 13-Mar-2014
  • Kirjastus: University of Pittsburgh Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780822977902
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"I can work best now while peeling potatoes. . . . It is for me what lens-grinding was for Spinoza."L. Wittgenstein

More than 250 years separate the publication of Baruch Spinoza's Ethics and Ludwig Wittgenstein's Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus. Both are considered monumental philosophical treatises, produced during markedly different times in human history, and notoriously challenging to interpret. In Peeling Potatoes or Grinding Lenses, Aristides Baltas contends that these works bear a striking similarity based on the idea of "radical immanence." Each purports to understand the world, thought, and language from the inside and in a way leading to the dissolution of all philosophy. In that guise, both offer a powerful argument against fundamentalism of all sorts and kinds

To Spinoza, God is just Nature. God is not above or separate from the world, humanity, or mere objects for, as Nature, He inheres in everything. To Wittgenstein, logic is not above or separate from language, thought, and the world. The hardness of the logical "must" inheres in states of affairs, facts, thoughts, and linguistic acts. Outside there are no truths or senseonly nonsense.

Through close readings of the texts based on lessons drawn from radical paradigm change in science, Baltas finds in both works a single-minded purpose, implacable reasoning, and an austerity of style that are rare in the history of philosophy. He analyzes the structure and content of each treatise, the authors' intentions, the limitations and possibilities afforded by scientific discovery in their respective eras, their radical opposition to prevailing philosophical views, and draws out the particulars, as well as the implications, of the arresting match between the two.
Preface xi
Note on References and List of Abbreviations xvii
Coordinates of a Conversation 1(22)
Chapter One Mutual Introductions
23(17)
Similarities and Affinities
24(2)
Rigor
26(2)
Method
28(4)
Insight
32(8)
Chapter Two Purposes and Ends
40(23)
Activity and Purpose
42(4)
Purpose and Responsibility
46(2)
...and the World
48(1)
End
49(2)
Eternity
51(4)
Spinoza's Body
55(2)
Life
57(2)
Nothing
59(2)
Silence
61(2)
Chapter Three Grammar
63(25)
Not My Purpose...
63(2)
History and the History of Philosophy
65(1)
The History of Philosophy and Philosophy
66(2)
Philosophy and the History of Science
68(3)
The History of Science, Language, and Philosophy Again
71(2)
Grammar and Paradigm Change
73(4)
From Grammar to Logic and Back
77(3)
Teacher and Student
80(4)
Wittgenstein's Body
84(2)
Telling Nonsense
86(2)
Chapter Four Strategies
88(25)
Spinoza's Strategy: First Round
88(1)
Wittgenstein's Position
89(1)
Thinking of Strategy
90(2)
My Strategy
92(5)
The Strategy of the Tractatus: Opening Moves
97(3)
Working from Within
100(2)
The First Movement
102(5)
Classifying Propositions
107(3)
Performing Futility
110(3)
Chapter Five Organizing Content
113(24)
Plans
114(7)
Structures
121(4)
Beginnings
125(5)
Matching Constraints
130(7)
Chapter Six Metaphysics
137(37)
Substance I
139(3)
Spinoza's Grammar
142(3)
Spinoza's Strategy: Second Round
145(6)
Epistemology I
151(4)
Language
155(4)
Substance II
159(6)
Bodies
165(3)
Afterlife
168(2)
Substance III
170(4)
Chapter Seven Matching Content
174(20)
Spinoza's Attributes
174(3)
Psychoanalysis
177(4)
Historical Materialism
181(2)
Scientific Perspectives versus Logical Manifolds
183(2)
Ideas versus Thoughts; Extended Modes versus Facts
185(3)
Epistemology II
188(6)
Chapter Eight Matching Form
194(37)
Possible Facts versus Possible Extended Modes
194(3)
Natural Space versus Logical Space
197(3)
Order and Connection versus Form and Structure
200(2)
The Metaphysical Subject
202(2)
Fractals
204(5)
Natural History
209(5)
Physics
214(5)
Natural Necessity versus Logical Possibility
219(6)
Logic in God, Logic of God
225(6)
Exodus: Toward History and Its Surprises 231(22)
Notes 253(22)
References 275(10)
Index 285
Aristides Baltas teaches at the National Technical University of Athens (NTUA), Greece. He is coeditor of Scientific Controversies: Philosophical and Historical Perspectives.