1st Edition

Wittgensteinian Values: Philosophy, Religious Belief and Descriptivist Methodology Philosophy, Religious Belief and Descriptivist Methodology

By Emyr Vaughan Thomas Copyright 2001
    142 Pages
    by Routledge

    This title was first published in 2001. This work examines the self-renouncing dimension which Wittgensteinian philosophy subscribes to ethico-religious ideals. "Wittensteinian values" are explored through a range of literary and cultural illustrations from Wittgenstein's own European milieu. The book also highlights an alternative model of self-renouncing faith, which has methodological implications for how a Wittgensteinian descriptivist approach should be carried out. Wittgensteinian assumptions about the nature of self-renunciation, the religious believer's orientation to the world and the place of the metaphysical in religion are among some of the elements that need to be reappraised.

    1 Self-Renouncing Religious Belief: The Wittgensteinian Position 2 Self-Renouncing Religious Belief in the Novels of Georges Bernanos 3 Roots of the Wittgensteinian Position: The Weltbild of Self-Concern 4 Conclusions and Beyond

    Biography

    Emyr Vaughan Thomas