Thinking: the soul of language

In Wittgenstein, meaning and mind. Cambridge, Mass., USA: Blackwell. pp. 207–227 (1990)
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Abstract

Wittgenstein's anti‐psychologism had induced him not to investigate the concepts that informed the psychological presuppositions of the Tractatus; only the essence of any possible symbolism seemed relevant to his concerns. The private language arguments have shown the incoherence of the idea that the foundations of language lie in private mental objects that constitute, or explain, the meanings of primitive indefinables of language. For language is 'alive' for one only in so far as one thinks or understands the senses attached to sentences. Thinking is a psychological process of coming into intellectual contact with, grasping, these lexical souls. One deep root of our troubles lies in a supposition which Wittgenstein criticized in the context of his discussion of the name/object model as misapplied to the concept of pain and its relation to pain‐behaviour. We must remind ourselves how specialized is the language‐game of saying what we think, of communicating our thoughts, of telling them to others.

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