Ordinary Language Philosophy - History

History

Part of a series on
Ludwig Wittgenstein
Early philosophy of Ludwig Wittgenstein
Picture theory of language
Truth tables · Truth conditions
Truth functions · State of affairs
Logical necessity
Later philosophy of Ludwig Wittgenstein
Meaning is use · Language-game
Private language argument
Family resemblance · Ideal language analysis · Rule following
Form of life · Grammar
Anti-skepticism
Wittgenstein's philosophy of mathematics
Movements
Analytic philosophy · Linguistic turn
Ideal language philosophy
Logical atomism · Logical positivism
Ordinary language philosophy
Wittgensteinian fideism · Quietism
Works
Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus
Some Remarks on Logical Form
Blue and Brown Books · Philosophical Remarks
Philosophical Investigations
On Certainty · Culture and Value
Remarks on Frazer's Golden Bough
Remarks on the Foundations of Mathematics
Zettel · Remarks on Colour
Lectures and Conversations on
Aesthetics, Psychology, and Religious Belief
People
Bertrand Russell · G. E. Moore
John Maynard Keynes · Paul Engelmann
Friedrich Waismann · Moritz Schlick
Rudolf Carnap · Francis Skinner
Frank Ramsey · Vienna Circle
G. E. M. Anscombe · Norman Malcolm
Rush Rhees · Peter Winch
Peter Geach · G. H. von Wright
Interpreters
Barry Stroud · Cora Diamond
Peter Hacker · Terry Eagleton
Stephen Toulmin · Saul Kripke
Anthony Kenny · Crispin Wright
Warren Goldfarb · James F. Conant
Gordon Baker · Stanley Cavell
D. Z. Phillips · Colin McGinn
Jaakko Hintikka · Oswald Hanfling
A. C. Grayling · Rupert Read
Other
Apostles · Moral Sciences Club
Stonborough House

Early analytic philosophy had a less positive view of ordinary language. Bertrand Russell tended to dismiss language as being of little philosophical significance, and ordinary language as just being too confused to help solve metaphysical and epistemological problems. Frege, the Vienna Circle (especially Rudolf Carnap), the young Wittgenstein, and W.V. Quine, all attempted to improve upon it, in particular using the resources of modern logic. Wittgenstein's view in the Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus more or less agreed with Russell's that language ought to be reformulated so as to be unambiguous, so as to accurately represent the world, so that we could better deal with the questions of philosophy.

By contrast, Wittgenstein would later describe his task as bringing "words back from their metaphysical to their everyday use". The sea of change brought on by his unpublished work in the 1930s centered largely on the idea that there is nothing wrong with ordinary language as it stands, and that many traditional philosophical problems were only illusions brought on by misunderstandings about language and related subjects. The former idea led to rejecting the approaches of earlier analytic philosophy – arguably, of any earlier philosophy – and the latter led to replacing them with the careful attention to language in its normal use, in order to "dissolve" the appearance of philosophical problems, rather than attempt to solve them. At its inception, ordinary language philosophy (also called linguistic philosophy) had been taken as either an extension of or as an alternative to analytic philosophy. Now that the term "analytic philosophy" has a more standardized meaning, ordinary language philosophy is viewed as a stage of the analytic tradition that followed logical positivism and that preceded the yet-to-be-named stage analytic philosophy continues in today..

Ordinary language analysis largely flourished and developed at Oxford in the 1940s, under Austin and Gilbert Ryle, and was quite widespread for a time before declining rapidly in popularity in the late 1960s and early 1970s. It is now not uncommon to hear that ordinary language philosophy is dead (Forguson 2001). Wittgenstein is perhaps the only one among the major figures of linguistic philosophy to retain anything like the reputation he had at that time. On the other hand, the attention to language remains one of the most important techniques in contemporary analytic thought, and many of the effects of ordinary language philosophy can still be felt across many academic disciplines.

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