Language, Limits, and Beyond
Early Wittgenstein and Rabindranath Tagore
Price: 1295.00 INR
ISBN:
9780190123970
Publication date:
13/04/2021
Hardback
224 pages
216x140mm
Price: 1295.00 INR
ISBN:
9780190123970
Publication date:
13/04/2021
Hardback
224 pages
Priyambada Sarkar
It is a novel and pioneering attempt to understand Wittgenstein's works from the perspective of Tagore.
Rights: World Rights
Priyambada Sarkar
Description
Ludwig Wittgenstein's interest in the writings of Rabindranath Tagore, is recognized among scholars worldwide though little has been written on his fascination with Tagore's poetry and symbolic plays. In Language, Limits, and Beyond, Priyambada Sarkar explores Tagore and Wittgenstein's philosophical arguments on the concept of 'threshold of language and meaning', highlighting the systematic connections between Tagore's canon and Wittgenstein's early works. Situating her study in the early 1900s, when Tagore's poetry had just become available in Europe, Sarkar finds similarities between Tagore's and Wittgenstein's exploration of the limits of language. She
argues that Wittgenstein's early philosophy can be better understood when juxtaposed with Tagore.
Drawing parallels between the worlds of philosophy and poetry, Sarkar identifies the point of convergence of their two philosophies in the realm of language, tracing how they reach surprisingly similar conclusions through entirely different paths of inquiry. Sarkar finally claims that such important points of contact will help one to arrange the pieces of the Tractarian jigsaw puzzle in a manner where all the pieces of logic, language, world, and the mystical will fall into place and form a coherent picture.
Priyambada Sarkar, Professor, Department of Philosophy, University of Calcutta
Priyambada Sarkar is professor at the Department of Philosophy, University of Calcutta, India.
Priyambada Sarkar
Table of contents
Preface
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1. Crossing the Threshold of Language: Early Wittgenstein
and Rabindranath Tagore
2. In Silence There Is Eloquence
3. The Domain of the Ineff able: The Ethical and the Aesthetic
4. The Domain of the Ineff able: The Religious
5. The King of the Dark Chamber and the Remarks of Early
Wittgenstein: An Interpretation
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
About the Author
Priyambada Sarkar
Description
Ludwig Wittgenstein's interest in the writings of Rabindranath Tagore, is recognized among scholars worldwide though little has been written on his fascination with Tagore's poetry and symbolic plays. In Language, Limits, and Beyond, Priyambada Sarkar explores Tagore and Wittgenstein's philosophical arguments on the concept of 'threshold of language and meaning', highlighting the systematic connections between Tagore's canon and Wittgenstein's early works. Situating her study in the early 1900s, when Tagore's poetry had just become available in Europe, Sarkar finds similarities between Tagore's and Wittgenstein's exploration of the limits of language. She
argues that Wittgenstein's early philosophy can be better understood when juxtaposed with Tagore.
Drawing parallels between the worlds of philosophy and poetry, Sarkar identifies the point of convergence of their two philosophies in the realm of language, tracing how they reach surprisingly similar conclusions through entirely different paths of inquiry. Sarkar finally claims that such important points of contact will help one to arrange the pieces of the Tractarian jigsaw puzzle in a manner where all the pieces of logic, language, world, and the mystical will fall into place and form a coherent picture.
Priyambada Sarkar, Professor, Department of Philosophy, University of Calcutta
Priyambada Sarkar is professor at the Department of Philosophy, University of Calcutta, India.
Table of contents
Preface
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1. Crossing the Threshold of Language: Early Wittgenstein
and Rabindranath Tagore
2. In Silence There Is Eloquence
3. The Domain of the Ineff able: The Ethical and the Aesthetic
4. The Domain of the Ineff able: The Religious
5. The King of the Dark Chamber and the Remarks of Early
Wittgenstein: An Interpretation
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
About the Author
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