3.6.07
Ludwig Wittgenstein, *Lecture on Ethics*,
Ludwig Wittgenstein, *Lecture on Ethics*,
Introduction, Interpretation and Complete Text Edited
by Edoardo Zamuner, E. Valentina Di
Lascio and David Levy. With Notes by Ilse Somavilla,
Quodlibet
Wittgenstein's Lecture on Ethics is his sole sustained
work on ethics. It is an unusually direct and personal
statement to a non-academic philosophical audience--the
only such lecture he gave. Moreover, the lecture was
given in 1929 during the key transitional period when
Wittgenstein was between the Tractatus
Logico-Philosophicus and his later work
for the Philosophical Investigations. It therefore
gives a fascinating insight into the intellectual
journey that Wittgenstein undertook into a subject of
profound personal importance for him. This edition is
the most authoritative ever published. It contains the
complete text of the lecture in three drafts. The text
includes for the first time manuscript 139b which had
been lost for 40 years and pages from the reverse of
139a which constitute an earlier outline of the
lecture. Each draft is presented en regard with the
draft and all emendations on one page and a final
reading copy on the other. The complete text and a
comprehensive notation indicating every
type of emendation to the drafts allows the reader to
reconstruct or unravel the development of
Wittgenstein's ideas in the lecture. Also included are
more than 100 pages of supplementary and explanatory
material. This material places the lecture in context
by covering its history, style, form and genesis. Two
chapters of philosophical analysis, explanation and
interpretation provide the most comprehensive
published survey of Wittgenstein's own work on ethics.
The supplementary material gives
readers the detailed background to understand fully
the unusual view of ethics Wittgenstein advanced in
his lecture.
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