I. Application: The Project's Idea
II. Work Given
III. Works Used
IV. Works Recommended To Purchase
V. Aims Achieved (Text written)
VI. Epilogue: Acknowledgements
last update
I want again to pursue research on Ludwig Wittgenstein's philosophy
at the Wittgenstein Archives at the
University of Bergen1
in order to dedicate myself to the study of the theme of "memory" ("Gedächtnis")
and "remembering" or "recalling" ("Erinnern")2
in an epistemic and semiotic field, references to which are scattered throughout
Wittgenstein's life-long writing, but might also be useful for interpreting
his late conventionalistic phase in thinking about certainty, doubt, belief
and knowledge.
The (biographical) background for my interest lies in an article I wrote for a semiotic journal and on a semiotic subject,3 dealing mainly with the conception of "reference" in Gottlob Frege and Umberto Eco. Eco's famous "model Q"4 does not only refer to Ross Quillian's early idea of how to model a semantic memory5 with a computational programme but also makes use of the Wittgensteinian concept of "family resemblance"; the "model Q" is basic for Eco's philosophy of culture, yet he is not very precise about the term "memory".
Since Eco uses Wittgenstein, who is far more precise in the use of such terms, I shall primarily investigate this concept in Wittgenstein's philosophy. Eco's talk6 about a "semantic universe" corresponds to the totality of language-games connected to conventions, practices and forms of life in Wittgenstein's way of talking, if I am allowed to employ an analogy; yet how then can Eco's term of a "(semantic) memory" be understood without running over the trenches put up by the "private language argument", i.e. without reading the term "memory" as a "solipsistic ability" (my wording), disengaged and completely freed from any social (or socio-semiotic) conceptualisation?-7
Even though I cannot dismiss my semiotic approach and my semiotic socialisation,8
I intend to concentrate this time more on aspects of, firstly, conceptual
questions, secondly, of the developmental structure of Wittgenstein's thinking
within these issues,9 and
thirdly, of an attempt in reconstruction within a conception of a certain
pragmatologic model-theory10
in order to
My current idea is to take a certain statement-view of knowledge
according to sup. point 3. within the frame of
memory understood along the lines of a non-statement-view15
in such a way, that the relativity and changes of conceptual and empirical
constituents of knowledge and conventions depend (also) on the form of
performance of remembering. The interrelation of the concepts of knowledge
and convention might be elucidated by a clarification of such a conception
of "memory" and "remembering", not the least into the direction of conceptualising
"historicity".
I hope to find textual evidence for this roughly outlined thesis in
Wittgenstein's writings as presented in the Bergen
Electronic Edition16
and in the PastMasters series of the
InteLex Corporation, which both are easily accessible at the WAB,
besides all the other valuable sources and editions I am still not sufficiently
and completely acquainted with.
delivered in autumn 2002;
the project and its funding were approved in December 2002
back to content
From Thusday, 23rd Jan. 2003,
onwards I almost regularly attended a local seminar for graduate students
on Wittgenstein's Philosophical Investigations, given in Norwegian
by Alois Pichler and Richard Sørli. Of the many themes worth remembering
I only want to mention the controversions about 'text-immanentism' (Savigny)
against 'contextualism' (Binkley, Stern, Pichler), on the different ideas
about (Wittgenstein's) notion of language, of a menta-linguistic reading
of certain parts of the Philosophical Investigations (especially
the Preface).17
On Friday, 24th Jan. 2003, I attended a so-called "Philosophical Pub" (at a local restaurant), to discuss a paper on Wittgenstein's Philosophy of Mathematics, to be prepared by Alois Pichler for a conference in Paris (2003). Present were, besides me and Alois, Edoardo Zamuner and Kevin M. Cahill. The latter dominated the evening in a Wittgensteinian manner, and I left earlier since I felt it was a waste of time after a first exchange of thoughts on Wittgenstein's philosophical thinking about mathematics. In particular I do not agree with Kevin on the notion of "proof" in the private language argument, since I see it related to Wittgenstein's notion of proof in the "Remarks on the Foundations of Mathematics". I am not going to develop this here any further. If I get funds, I might spend time on researching this.
The paper I was writing was provisionally re-titled in February 2003:
"Recollection of References. With Wittgenstein on the Language-Games of Remembering";
I might stick to this title. At the time of this slight change, I had already drafted more than 45 pages, probably too long for a paper or the planned chapter in contribution to the volume planned to be edited by Ballhausen & Wittmann. Still -- a large part of my thoughts on memory in connection to Eco's "model Q" and Stachowiak's GMT18 was not taken care of.
On Thursday 27th Feb. 2003 Edoardo Zamuner gave a very good lecture at the Department of Philosophy:
"Wittgenstein on the Objective Core of Psychological Statements. The Case of Believing"
The discussion which this lecture arose was vivid and fruitful.
On Tuesday, 4th March 2003, another occasion of a "Philosophical Pub" was held in a even smaller circle: Edoardo Zamuner, Alois Pichler, and I. Topics of our conversation where 'Moore's Paradox', 'Wittgenstein and Analytic Philosophy', scholars like Kevin Cahill or Michele Ranchetti, furthermore 'Attitude, Dispositions and Will',19 and we also exchanged, views, hopes, and thoughts about the future of the WAB.
I personally refused to give a(nother) lecture due to lack of time for extra preparations and due to a heavy cold I caught at the end of February. One should not overlook the fact that I, as usual, was spending 60 hours a week at the Archives, often until late after mid-night, at least this is my experience from my research sojourns in 1997 (about 2 months), 1998 (half a year), 2002 (half a year), and 2003 (about 70 days), not to forget the time one might read in bed or on the week-ends. Compared with this apparent engagement in one's project the amount of money in subsistence, diets or scholarships one receives is ridiculous (per hour it is by far lower than any of the lowest wages in industrial countries are, and in the case of EU scholarships it does not even cover a form of public or national insurance).
But I agreed to follow an invitation for the end of March or in April 2003, to give a presentation in the seminar of Pichler and Sørli at the Department of Philosophy, when my EU ARI WAB project would be finished (cf. sup.); currently I have no idea what exactly I will do at this presentation, probably I just let the students discuss MS 115: 176f. (of which I give a new and complete translation in my paper "Recollection of References. With Wittgenstein on the Language-Games of Remembering") and this passage's edition in the "Brown Book". From that one could go on to talk about 'memory' and what Wittgenstein says about the language-games of remembering, mainly with attention to "Philosophische Untersuchungen" I.-
A final and partly self-critical report on my achievements can be found
below, cf. inf.
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Eco, Umberto (1976, 1987, 1991): A Theory of Semiotics. Bloomington, Ind.: Indiana University Press. Translation into German by Günter Memmert: Semiotik. Entwurf einer Theorie der Zeichen. München: Fink
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Gelbmann, Gerhard (2001): "Watzlawick (et al.) und Wittgenstein: Anregungen, Bezugnahmen, Parallelen", Jahrbuch der Deutschen Ludwig Wittgenstein Gesellschaft 2001/2002: 9-44 et Sammelpunkt. Elektronisch archivierte Theorie, http://sammelpunkt.philo.at:8080/ (electronic document, last access: March 2003)
Gelbmann, Gerhard (2002a): "Skript, Text, Werk, Album. Zu Alois Pichlers Umgang mit Wittgensteins Schreiben", Sammelpunkt. Elektronisch archivierte Theorie, http://sammelpunkt.philo.at:8080/ et http://h2hobel.phl.univie.ac.at/~yellow/Wittgenstein/Pichler.html (electronic document, last access: Jan. 2003)
Gelbmann, Gerhard (2002b): Observations on Transaction. A Discussion of Watzlawick’s Second Axiom. European University Studies: Ser. 20, Philosophy, Vol. 645. Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang
Gelbmann, Gerhard (2002c): "Pragmatics and the Conceptual Constitutivity of the Social (contra Hintikka and Luntley). Semiotic Subjectivity I", Lecture at the Department of Philosophy, University of Bergen, Norway, May 2002. Sammelpunkt. Elektronisch archivierte Theorie, http://sammelpunkt.philo.at:8080/ et http://h2hobel.phl.univie.ac.at/~yellow/projects/lecture1.htm (electronic document, last access: Aug. 2002)
Gelbmann, Gerhard (2002d): "An Outline of Pragmatologic Model-Theory (sec. Stachowiak). Semiotic Subjectivity II", Lecture at the HIT Centre, Bergen, Norway, June 2002. Sammelpunkt. Elektronisch archivierte Theorie: http://sammelpunkt.philo.at:8080/ et http://h2hobel.phl.univie.ac.at/~yellow/projects/lecture1.htm (electronic document, last access: Aug. 2002)
Gelbmann, Gerhard (2002e): "Persons as Socio-Semiotic Subjects. Semiotic Subjectivity III. Presentation of Observations on Transaction", Lecture at the HIT Centre, Bergen, Norway, August 2002. Sammelpunkt. Elektronisch archivierte Theorie: http://sammelpunkt.philo.at:8080/ et http://h2hobel.phl.univie.ac.at/~yellow/projects/lecture3.htm (electronic document, last access: Sept. 2002)
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Haller, Rudolf; Puhl, Klaus (Eds.) (2001b): Wittgenstein and the Future of Philosophy. A Reassessment after 50 Years. Papers of the 24th International Wittgenstein-Symposium, Kirchberg am Wechsel 2001. Vol.2. Österreichische Ludwig Wittgenstein Gesellschaft, Kirchberg am Wechsel
Haller, Rudolf; Puhl, Klaus (Eds.) (2002): Wittgenstein and the Future of Philosophy. A Reassessment after 50 Years. Proceedings of the 24th International Wittgenstein-Symposium, Kirchberg am Wechsel 2001. Vienna: ÖBV&HPT
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Janik, Allan (2002): "On the Limits of Language and Other Nonsense". In: Haller & Puhl 2002: 171-175
Janik, Allan (2003): "Art, Craftsmanship and Philosophical Method According to Wittgenstein", Rue Descartes. Revue Collège International de Philosophie 39: 18-27 et Sammelpunkt. Elektronisch archivierte Theorie, http://sammelpunkt.philo.at:8080/ (electronic document, last access: Feb. 2003)
Johannessen, Kjell S.; Nordenstam, Tore (Eds.) (1995): Culture and Value. Philosophy and the Cultural Sciences. Papers of the 18th International Wittgenstein-Symposium, Kirchberg am Wechsel 1995. Contributions of the Austrian Ludwig Wittgenstein Society Vol.III. Vienna
Johannessen, Kjell S.; Nordenstam, Tore (Eds.) (1996): Wittgenstein and the Philosophy of Culture. Proceedings of the 18th International Wittgenstein-Symposium, Kirchberg am Wechsel 1995. Vienna: HPT
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Wittgenstein, Ludwig (1984ff.): Werkausgabe. Bände 1-8. Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp
Wittgenstein, Ludwig (1992b): Letzte Schriften über die Philosophie der Psychologie. Das Innere und das Äußere. 1949-1951. Band II. Last Writings on the Philosophy of Psychology. The Inner and the Outer. 1949-1951. Volume II (edited by Georg Henrik von Wright and Heikki Nyman, English translation by C. Grant Luckhardt and Maximilian A. E. Aue). Oxford: Blackwell
Wittgenstein, Ludwig (1993a): Philosophical Occasions. 1912-1951 (edited by James C. Klagge and Alfred Nordmann). Indianapolis: Hackett
Wright, Georg Henrik von (1982, 1986): Wittgenstein. Oxford: Blackwell. Translation into German by Joachim Schulte: Wittgenstein. Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp
Wright, Georg Henrik von (1983): "On Causal Knowledge". In: Ginet & Shoemaker 1983: 50-62
Wrinch, Dorothy (1920): "On the Nature of Memory", Mind: a Quarterly Review of Psychology and Philosophy N. S. 29, 113: 46-61
Zemach, Eddy M. (1968): "A Definition of Memory", Mind: a Quarterly Review of Psychology and Philosophy N. S. 77, 308: 526-536
Haller, Rudolf; Puhl, Klaus (Eds.) (2002):
Wittgenstein and the Future of Philosophy. A Reassessment after 50 Years. Proceedings of the 24th International Wittgenstein-Symposium, Kirchberg am Wechsel 2001. Vienna: ÖBV&HPTMalcolm, Norman (1963): Knowledge and Certainty: Essays and Lectures. Englewood Cliffs, N. J.: Prentice-Hall
Malcolm, Norman (1977): Thought and Knowledge. Essays. Ithaca: Cornell University Press
The stock of books and other sources currently held at the WAB
as available for scholars and visitors is listed at "wabbooks".
These works are primarily supposed to be read and used at the WAB,
but permission to take books outside the archive can be granted by Alois
Pichler via personal contact.
I furthermore propose to use the Internet-data-base "Sammelpunkt"
as an Open Archive for making one's conference papers and proceedings,
articles, essays and other philosophical texts easily available at virtually
low costs or even at no costs at all.
During my EU
ARI WAB sojourn, I i.a. worked on a text directly connected to
my project, as proposed (cf. sup.), titled:
"Recollection of References. With Wittgenstein on the Language-Games of Remembering"21
This text is in its current version rather long, stretching over about
71 pages and painstakingly deals with my theme in a rather wide frame.
In some points I deviated from the proposed idea, and I describe the reasons
for it, but also give annotations and explanations to my text as follows:
While my text in its second version was proof-read,22
I started with overworking two former papers on Hintikka by putting them
together in an essay still untitled, one of which has its core in a lecture
I gave in Bergen in summer 2002,23
the other was derived from two e-mails24
I had sent out to scholars I got to know as being interested in Wittgenstein's
philosophy (to say it in most general terms). The plan might lead to the
publication of a volume of my Bergenser Essays.
Among the obstacles I met I only want to mention that computer-access,
especially to the BEE, was not always as it should have been, besides
the fact that the screen I was using suddenly shrienked without me being
notified. The computers depicted a problem in another direction, too: Privacy
was not guaranteed, one could not store one's data in a way that was only
accessible for oneself. I think, improvement in this direction is urgent.
A final report on my experiences during this research sojourn at
the
WAB, as far as not
already done so in this web-site, was delivered under exclusion of the
public to the corresponding office of the EU, by quoting this web-site.
The databases of the Bergen Electronic Edition (BEE) and the PastMasters series of the InteLex Corporation were useful tools (and I largely relied on the first in dating certain sources). Both institutions, the WAB as well as the EU, shall be acknowledged with the best wishes for a prosperous future and a furthered cooperation.
My project's roots lie in several conversations I had with Thomas Ballhausen in Vienna, especially from the time of winter 2001 until autumn 2002; I am indebted to him for many reasons, foremost for his steadfast belief in the path my life has taken, devoted to Writing and Philosophy, a belief whose strength often outdated my own. Other roots of my project, if I can undig them all and safely, have to be thought in my study-long contacts with Prof. Herbert Hrachovec from the University of Vienna, who at several occasions supported my academic work in a very uncomplicated and enlighted manner.
Among my research colleagues at the WAB, at different times and occasions in the last six years, I am indebted to Alois Pichler, Wilhelm Krüger, Dino Buzzetti, Kevin Cahill, Simo Säätelä, Aleksander Motturi, Michael Luntley, Edward Vanhoutte, Ludovic Soutif, Anat Biletzki, Thomas Binder, and Edoardo Zamuner for discussions, hints, helpful mutual critique, for a grand and diligent attitude in our spread tasks, and for their various philosophising. As I vividly remember, I have in many ways profited from them, and from others in the academic surroundings of the Universitetet i Bergen (like Knut Ågotnes or Ralph Jewell), due to a climate of open-mindedness in scientific spirit, which I found inviting and elucidating.
I would also like to thank among the Wittgenstein scholars Allen Janik and Kristóf Nyíri for their positive reactions to my philosophical work. Herbert Hrachovec deserves to be mentioned for all the support throughout the last 10 years or so, for numerous letters of support, contacts, invitations to participate in projects, seminars, discussions, all of which helped in bringing me where I am now.
Eldbjørg Gunnarson and Christina Therese Brunner shall be thanked for their support in bureaucratic and administrative matters, they untiringly took care of several troubles of a sort unbearable for philosophers gifted with a free mind. What would we academics do without them!
Last but not least Zhihong Gong has to be mentioned for her inspiring activity in her own masterful project in Solid Earth Physics at the University of Bergen, for her patience when I could not stop talking about Philosophy while Bergenser rain did not ever seem to stop, but in addition to that she deserves being mentioned for something which in itself is an artful semiotic matter, namely her fabulous cooking.
All these names shall be kept in a dry and homely place: my memory.--
created by G.G. on December 17th 2002
last update by G.G. on April 1st
2003