Ludwig Wittgenstein: Life and Work · Born on 26 April 1889 in Vienna, died 29 April 1951 in Cambridge. · His family was of mixed Jewish, Protestant and Catholic origin. · His father Karl Wittgenstein was one of the richest businessmen in Austria. An owner of an iron and steel industry complex (Poldi Kladno). · Their family house hosted the most distinguished artists of the time: Johannes Brahms, Franz Grillparzer, Felix Mendelssohn, Gustav Mahler, Gustav Klimt. · LW has four brothers and three sisters. Two brothers committed suicide. · LW visited the second-rate Realschule in Linz. Adolf Hitler was one of his schoolmates. · His earliest influences are o Karl Kraus, his satirical journal Die Fackel (“The Torch”) o Arthur Schopenhauer, The World as Will and Representation o Otto Weininger, Sex and Character, his conception of genius, the duty to think clearly as a duty to oneself) o Heinrich Hertz, Principles of Mechanics, his method of dissolving conceptual problems o Ludwig Bolzmann · LW studied mechanical engineering in Berlin and aeronautics in Manchester. o He conducted his own research leading a patent of a jet rotor (for a helicopter). · At that time, he read o Bertrand Russell’s The Principles of Mathematics o Gottlob Frege’s Grundgesetze der Arithmetik · He suggested a solution of Russell’s paradox. · On 18 October 1911, he appeared in Russell’s office. This date marks the begin of their fruitful collaboration. · In 1913 he dictated his earliest text that survived: the Notes on Logic. o Logic is the basis of philosophy. o Distrust of grammar: surface grammar can lead us astray · In 1914 he dictated notes to G.E. Moore which weren’t accepted as a BA thesis. o the distinction between what can be said and what has to be shown. · In 1914 LW got rid of his inheritance in favor of Austrian artists without means. Rainer Maria Rilke and Georg Trakl were among them. · He was enlisted as a volunteer into Austrian army and sent to the Eastern front. · Reading Leo Tolstoy’s Gospel in Brief. · Often thinking of suicide and the meaning of life (“The meaning of life … we can call God”) · Awarded for bravery and valor. · Finally, in 1918, he was transferred to the Italian front and ended up in a prisoners of war camp. · During the war years, Wittgenstein wrote his first main work Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus. o The manuscript was rejected by two publishers. o Eventually published with a help of Bertrand Russell and with his introduction (which according to Wittgenstein misinterprets the main idea of the book). · In 1920 Wittgenstein began his unsuccessful career as primary schoolteacher in rural Austria. · From 1926 to 1928 he worked as an architect designing a modernist house for his sister. · In 1929 he returned to Cambridge and obtained his PhD for the Tractatus. · Since the end of the 1920s, he was regularly meeting with the members of the Vienna Circle, esp. with Moritz Schlick and Friedrich Waismann. · Wittgenstein spent his academic career as a lecturer and later as a professor in Cambridge. · Often visiting his family in Vienna and his hut in Norway. · In 1935 he investigated a possibility of moving to the Soviet Union. · During the Second World War, he worked as a porter in a hospital and a technician for a medical research. · He didn’t manage to publish anything (save one paper) during his Cambridge years. He avoided academic journals and conferences. · In 1947 he resigned his professorship. · He died in 1951, writing his remarks to his last days. Further reading Monk, R. (1990). Ludwig Wittgenstein: The Duty of Genius. Jonathan Cape. McGuinness, B. (1988). Wittgenstein. A Life (Vol. 1): Young Ludwig 1988–1921. Duckworth.