Indirect Communication as a Language-Game: Kierkegaard Through a Late-Wittgensteinian Lens

Kierkegaard’s influence on Wittgenstein is widely recognized, but is most commonly treated in terms of (shared or opposed) views on religion, philosophy, ethics or nonsense. This paper will attempt to interpret Kierkegaard’s writing strategy known as ‘indirect communication’ in terms not of the Trac...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bojan Blagojević
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Singidunum University. Faculty of Media and Communications 2016-04-01
Series:AM: Art + Media
Subjects:
Online Access:http://fmkjournals.fmk.edu.rs/index.php/AM/article/view/113
Description
Summary:Kierkegaard’s influence on Wittgenstein is widely recognized, but is most commonly treated in terms of (shared or opposed) views on religion, philosophy, ethics or nonsense. This paper will attempt to interpret Kierkegaard’s writing strategy known as ‘indirect communication’ in terms not of the Tractatus, but of Philosophical Investigations, namely as a language-game of sorts. We will attempt to show the deficiencies of Cavell’s and Conant’s interpretations and, by placing the concept of such communication in context, referring it to similar concepts, such as Socratic irony, we will aim to sketch its grammar and its relation to the ‘ordinary’ direct communication. Further, we will argue that indirect communication, pertaining to Kierkegaard’s concept of subjective truth, avoids the charge of being a private language.
ISSN:2217-9666
2406-1654