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@inproceedings{1195836, author = {Mácha, Jakub}, address = {Kirchberg am Wechsel}, booktitle = {Papers of the 37th International Wittgenstein Symposium}, keywords = {Wittgenstein; Hegel}, howpublished = {tištěná verze "print"}, language = {eng}, location = {Kirchberg am Wechsel}, pages = {181-183}, publisher = {Austrian Ludwig Wittgenstein Society}, title = {Fitting, Feeling and What Hegel Meant}, year = {2014} }
TY - JOUR ID - 1195836 AU - Mácha, Jakub PY - 2014 TI - Fitting, Feeling and What Hegel Meant PB - Austrian Ludwig Wittgenstein Society CY - Kirchberg am Wechsel KW - Wittgenstein KW - Hegel N2 - Two objects fit together if they have a compatible shape. I want to focus on a different kind of fitting which is predominant in Wittgenstein's latest texts. This is a fitting underlined by a feeling of aesthetic comfort. One may even feel that all things fit together. Wittgenstein ascribed this expression of the unity of experience to Hegel. I argue for two claims: (1) Wittgenstein might have been inspired by the Neo-hegelian philosophy of Francis Bradley and his account of a feeling base. (2) Wittgenstein ascribed to Hegel the idea that objects are what they are only in their familiar surroundings. Hegel indeed claimed something like this—most notably in the "Sense-Certainty" chapter of the Phenomenology of Spirit. I provide a Wittgensteinian reading of this chapter concluding that every demonstrative act occurs against a background of demonstrative practices and that the doctrine of external relations is an inadequate account of knowledge. ER -
MÁCHA, Jakub. Fitting, Feeling and What Hegel Meant. In \textit{Papers of the 37th International Wittgenstein Symposium}. Kirchberg am Wechsel: Austrian Ludwig Wittgenstein Society, 2014, p.~181-183. ISSN~1022-3398.
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